Diverse signaling pathways modulate nuclear receptor recruitment of N-CoR and SMRT complexes

Robert M. Lavinsky(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Kristen Jepsen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Thorsten Heinzel(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Joseph Torchia(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Tina-Marie Mullen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Rachel Schiff(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Alfonso León‐Del‐Río(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Mercedes Ricote(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Sally D. Ngo(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Joslin Gemsch(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Susan G. Hilsenbeck(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), C. Kent Osborne(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Christopher K. Glass(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Michael G. Rosenfeld(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), David W. Rose(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 17, 1998
Cited by 665Open Access

Abstract

Several lines of evidence indicate that the nuclear receptor corepressor (N-CoR) complex imposes ligand dependence on transcriptional activation by the retinoic acid receptor and mediates the inhibitory effects of estrogen receptor antagonists, such as tamoxifen, suppressing a constitutive N-terminal, Creb-binding protein/coactivator complex-dependent activation domain. Functional interactions between specific receptors and N-CoR or SMRT corepressor complexes are regulated, positively or negatively, by diverse signal transduction pathways. Decreased levels of N-CoR correlate with the acquisition of tamoxifen resistance in a mouse model system for human breast cancer. Our data suggest that N-CoR- and SMRT-containing complexes act as rate-limiting components in the actions of specific nuclear receptors, and that their actions are regulated by multiple signal transduction pathways.


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