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Molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor:Role of ligand-dependent receptor phosphorylation and half-life in determination of ligand-specific transcriptional activity. : Contents Pages

Glucocorticoids mediate their effects by binding to the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), resulting in modulation of transcription of target genes via direct binding to DNA or tethering via proteinprotein interactions. A central question is what determines the rank order of ligand-selective transcriptio...

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Main Author: Avenant, Chanel
Other Authors: Hapgood, Janet P
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Molecular and Cell Biology 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Avenant, Chanel
author2 Hapgood, Janet P
author_browse Avenant, Chanel
Hapgood, Janet P
author_facet Hapgood, Janet P
Avenant, Chanel
author_sort Avenant, Chanel
collection Thesis
description Glucocorticoids mediate their effects by binding to the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), resulting in modulation of transcription of target genes via direct binding to DNA or tethering via proteinprotein interactions. A central question is what determines the rank order of ligand-selective transcription with different GR ligands for the same gene in the same cell. Using a panel of twelve GR ligands, including agonists, partial agonists and antagonists, the relationship between the extent of GR phosphorylation at S226, GR turnover and transcriptional response, was investigated using a variety of biochemical approaches. Using a phospho-S226-specific GR antibody, ligand-selective S226 phosphorylation was shown to occur in both COS-1 and U2OS cells, while GR phosphorylation at S226 was shown to inhibit maximal transactivation and transrepression efficacy. Attempts to identify the kinases responsible for this interaction were inconclusive but suggested a combination of kinases is responsible for the in vivo phosphorylation of the hGR in these cells. Similarly the rate of GR degradation was different for the different ligands. Interestingly, both ligand-selective GR phosphorylation and half-life were found to correlate with efficacy for transactivation and transrepression of model synthetic reporter genes, where agonists resulted in the greatest extent of phosphorylation and the fastest vii rate of GR turnover, suggesting a link between these functions. Furthermore experiments where transcription was blocked suggest that GR turnover does not require transcription. However, using a S226A GR mutant, as well as in experiments where GR turnover was blocked, it was established that neither phosphorylation of the GR at S226 nor GR degradation rate determines the rank order of ligand-selective GR transactivation. The mechanisms whereby GR phosphorylation influence GR-mediated transcription was further investigated using a triple phosphorylation deficient mutant. It was shown that phosphorylation at one or more of residues S203/S211/S226 is required for transactivation of a MMTV promoter but does not affect unliganded or agonist-induced GR degradation and acetylation. Additionally, it was shown that phosphorylation at S203/S211/S226 is not the sole determinant of co-activator p300 recruitment to the GR. Interestingly, GR-mediated transrepression via AP-1 is less sensitive to GR phosphorylation than GR-mediated transactivation, indicating different mechanisms in the role of GR phosphorylation on transactivation vs. transrepression. Pull-down and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays showed that phosphorylation of the GR at one or more of these residues are required for interaction of the GR with the co-activator GRIP-1 in vitro and for maximal recruitment of GR and GRIP-1 to the MMTV promoter in intact cells. Cellular fractionation showed that phosphorylation at these residues is not however required for GR nuclear localisation. Taken together these results support the conclusion that phosphorylation at one or more of S203/S211/S226 of the hGR is required for maximal transactivation response to enable GRIP-1 recruitment to the hGR.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher Department of Molecular and Cell Biology
publisherStr Department of Molecular and Cell Biology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/4238 Molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor:Role of ligand-dependent receptor phosphorylation and half-life in determination of ligand-specific transcriptional activity. : Contents Pages Avenant, Chanel Hapgood, Janet P Cell Biology Glucocorticoids mediate their effects by binding to the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), resulting in modulation of transcription of target genes via direct binding to DNA or tethering via proteinprotein interactions. A central question is what determines the rank order of ligand-selective transcription with different GR ligands for the same gene in the same cell. Using a panel of twelve GR ligands, including agonists, partial agonists and antagonists, the relationship between the extent of GR phosphorylation at S226, GR turnover and transcriptional response, was investigated using a variety of biochemical approaches. Using a phospho-S226-specific GR antibody, ligand-selective S226 phosphorylation was shown to occur in both COS-1 and U2OS cells, while GR phosphorylation at S226 was shown to inhibit maximal transactivation and transrepression efficacy. Attempts to identify the kinases responsible for this interaction were inconclusive but suggested a combination of kinases is responsible for the in vivo phosphorylation of the hGR in these cells. Similarly the rate of GR degradation was different for the different ligands. Interestingly, both ligand-selective GR phosphorylation and half-life were found to correlate with efficacy for transactivation and transrepression of model synthetic reporter genes, where agonists resulted in the greatest extent of phosphorylation and the fastest vii rate of GR turnover, suggesting a link between these functions. Furthermore experiments where transcription was blocked suggest that GR turnover does not require transcription. However, using a S226A GR mutant, as well as in experiments where GR turnover was blocked, it was established that neither phosphorylation of the GR at S226 nor GR degradation rate determines the rank order of ligand-selective GR transactivation. The mechanisms whereby GR phosphorylation influence GR-mediated transcription was further investigated using a triple phosphorylation deficient mutant. It was shown that phosphorylation at one or more of residues S203/S211/S226 is required for transactivation of a MMTV promoter but does not affect unliganded or agonist-induced GR degradation and acetylation. Additionally, it was shown that phosphorylation at S203/S211/S226 is not the sole determinant of co-activator p300 recruitment to the GR. Interestingly, GR-mediated transrepression via AP-1 is less sensitive to GR phosphorylation than GR-mediated transactivation, indicating different mechanisms in the role of GR phosphorylation on transactivation vs. transrepression. Pull-down and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays showed that phosphorylation of the GR at one or more of these residues are required for interaction of the GR with the co-activator GRIP-1 in vitro and for maximal recruitment of GR and GRIP-1 to the MMTV promoter in intact cells. Cellular fractionation showed that phosphorylation at these residues is not however required for GR nuclear localisation. Taken together these results support the conclusion that phosphorylation at one or more of S203/S211/S226 of the hGR is required for maximal transactivation response to enable GRIP-1 recruitment to the hGR. 2014-07-30T17:32:07Z 2014-07-30T17:32:07Z 2009 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4238 eng application/pdf Department of Molecular and Cell Biology Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Cell Biology
Avenant, Chanel
Molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor:Role of ligand-dependent receptor phosphorylation and half-life in determination of ligand-specific transcriptional activity. : Contents Pages
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor:Role of ligand-dependent receptor phosphorylation and half-life in determination of ligand-specific transcriptional activity. : Contents Pages
title_full Molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor:Role of ligand-dependent receptor phosphorylation and half-life in determination of ligand-specific transcriptional activity. : Contents Pages
title_fullStr Molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor:Role of ligand-dependent receptor phosphorylation and half-life in determination of ligand-specific transcriptional activity. : Contents Pages
title_full_unstemmed Molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor:Role of ligand-dependent receptor phosphorylation and half-life in determination of ligand-specific transcriptional activity. : Contents Pages
title_short Molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor:Role of ligand-dependent receptor phosphorylation and half-life in determination of ligand-specific transcriptional activity. : Contents Pages
title_sort molecular mechanism of action of the glucocorticoid receptor role of ligand dependent receptor phosphorylation and half life in determination of ligand specific transcriptional activity contents pages
topic Cell Biology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4238
work_keys_str_mv AT avenantchanel molecularmechanismofactionoftheglucocorticoidreceptorroleofliganddependentreceptorphosphorylationandhalflifeindeterminationofligandspecifictranscriptionalactivitycontentspages