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Biology 575 Winter 2010 Human Biochemical Genetics Steroid Hormones and Steroid Receptors – Pt. 1 Lenore K. Beitel, Ph.D. [email protected] 2010/3/16 A. Steroid Hormones B. Steroid Hormone Receptors • S Structure/Function /F i C. Classical Mutations/SNPs in Steroid Receptors • Androgen Receptor (AR) • Glucocorticoid Receptor (GR) • Mineralocorticoid Receptor (MR) • Estrogen Receptor (ER) D. Trinucleotide Repeat Variation in the AR Intracellular Signalling Multicellular organisms need intercellular communication to: - organize body plan during embryogenesis - maintain physiology and cell functions during life span Steroid hormones: - derived from cholesterol - small hydrophobic signaling molecules - enter target cells & bind to specific steroid receptors Steroid receptors: - ligand-inducible transcription factors - regulate specific genes - integrate diverse signaling pathways as are targets of post-translation modification - regulate other major signaling cascades (signal transduction crosstalk) hydrophobic hormones (steroids): - carried in blood by transport proteins - enter target cell and bind to receptors in cell hydrophilic hormones (peptides): - bind to receptors at cell surface - activate formation of 2nd messengers Steroid Hormone Structure Overview of Steroid Hormone Synthesis Names of Steroids: Built-in Clues to their Structures Suffix –ol = important –OH group ( i.e. cholesterol, cortisol) Suffix –diol = two –OH groups ( i.e. estradiol) Suffix –one = ketone group =O (i.e. progesterone, aldosterone, testosterone) Distinguishing features Coritsol and aldosterone: –OH at C-11 Cortisol: –OH at C-17 Aldosterone: –HC=O at C-18 Testosterone and androstenedione: =O at C-3 Testosterone: –OH at C-17 Androstenedione: =O at C-17 Testosterone: a C-19 steroid, =O at C-3, C-19 is CH3 Estrogen: a C-18 steroid, -OH at C3, aromatized A ring Aromatase A t (CYP19) Group Progestin Steroid Carbons Principal Source Target Tissue Cholesterol C27 Diet, liver Progesterone C21 Adrenal gland Precursor Ovary, placenta Uterus, oviduct Adrenal gland Kidney - cortex Metabolic precursor of all steroids Mineralocorticoid Aldosterone C21 Glucocorticoid Cortisol (hydrocortisone) C21 Adrenal gland All cells - cortex Androgen Testosterone, C19 Testis C18 Peripheral tissues Ovary 5α-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) Estrogen 17β-estradiol Hormonal Function Testis, brain, prostate, seminal vesicles Uterus, vagina, breast, brain, liver Maintenance of pregnancy Regulation of electrolyte balance Regulation of energy utilization, catabolic action Development of male sex characteristics, male behavior Development of female sex characteristics Steroidogenesis Wikipedia - Estradiol Evolutionary tree for the vertebrate steroid hormonethyroid hormone receptor superfamily -complex evolutionary history -gene duplication events -domain domain swapping α Structural and Functional Organization of Steroid Hormone Receptors Steroid Hormone Receptor Domains N-terminal domain NURSA Structure of Nuclear Receptor Ligand-binding Domain (LBD) - conformational change upon ligand binding - helix 12 traps ligand in pocket Structure of liganded GR LBD-TIF2 complex Hormone = dexamethasone (Dex), a synthetic glucocorticoid Hormone (dexamethasone) in ligand-binding pocket of GR - specific amino acids in ligand-binding pocket make contact with ligand Structure of Steroid Receptor DBD Estrogen Receptor Dimer Bound to DNA Structure of Steroid Receptor DBD Steroid Response Elements (SREs) of Various Steroid Hormone Receptors SREs are enhancer elements; usually located in promoter region of genes Steroid Receptors Bound to Inverted Repeats NURSA Co-transfection Assay - Transcriptional Activation - steroid receptor expression can be driven by different promoters (e.g. SV40, CMV) - MMTV-GRE = MMTV-ARE - reporter gene can vary (luciferase, growth hormone, chloramphenicol acetyl transferase) Luciferase Reporter Gene Assay NURSA Luciferase Reporter Gene Assay NURSA BIOCHEMICAL GENETICS <GS <ES <EG Nuclear Localization Signal (NLS) Translocation: - depends on NLS - nuclear transport through nuclear pores is an ATP dependent process Steroid Receptor Action Coactivators and corepressors The conformation of a steroid receptor can change depending on whether it is bound to an agonist (activating hormone) or antagonist (anti-hormone). Agonist-bound receptors can bind coactivators while antagonist-bound receptors can interact with corepressors. Alternate mechanism of inhibition of gene transcription: occupation of SRE by steroid receptor dimers interferes with binding of factor(s) required for gene expression Steroid Receptors Coactivator Activity (Histone Acetyl Transferases) NURSA Mechanism of Transcriptional Activation by Androgen Receptor 3 Chromatin Remodeling 4 5 TBP/TATAA Targeting PIC Stabilization 6 Transcription Initiation TBP RNA Polymerase II HAT Activity TAFII 30 CBP/p300 1 Androgen pCAF BRG-1 TIF 2 TIF-2 Androgen AR AR Androgen ARE AR 2 Heat Shock Complex Highlights of Steroid Receptor Structure and Mechanisms of Action - 1 Steroid hormones: - small molecules derived from cholesterol - bind to a specific receptor and alter transcriptional activity of responsive g genes Steroid hormone receptors: - in cytoplasm or nucleus of target cells - function as ligand-dependent transcription factors - variable N-terminal domain involved in transcriptional activation - central DNA-binding domain (DBD) binds to specific steroid response ( ) elements (SRE) - C-terminal ligand-binding domain (LBD) - other subdomains for nuclear localization (NLS), dimerization, and association with heat shock proteins, coactivators and coregulators. Interactions between receptor domains modulate ligand dissociation, dimerization and transactivation Classical Mechanism of Action of Steroid Hormone Receptors hsps coativators hsps Highlights of Steroid Receptor Structure and Mechanisms of Action - 2 Steroid hormones enter the cell by diffusion and bind to specific receptors Receptors undergo a conformational change which promotes heat shock protein dissociation, exposes the DBD & NLS & dimerization domains and allows receptors to interact with other proteins Receptors translocate to the nucleus and bind to SREs as a dimer Receptors form complexes with coregulatory proteins The nearby promoter is activated and mRNA transcription is initiated The mRNAs are translated to produce proteins that alter cell function Coactivator/corepressor levels may influence response to hormone Non-classical Actions of Steroid Hormones and Receptors Take home message: Steroids can have regulatory effects independent of transcription!! ¾ Nongenomic steroid actions are frequently mediated through specific membrane receptors ¾ Estrogen receptors activated by and can activate mitogen-activated protein kinases - ER can activate cell proliferation through ERK pathway ¾ Post-translation modifications can alter steroid receptor activity i.e. phosphorylation ¾ Steroid receptors can bind to and modulate activity of other proteins