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Department of Physiology University of Missouri-Columbia School of Medicine Columbia, Missouri 65212
The adrenal steroid hormones, glucocorticoids,
control many physiological responses to trauma, including elevated
synthesis of fibrinogen, a major blood-clotting protein. Glucocorticoid
regulation of the
-fibrinogen subunit gene in Xenopus
laevis is mediated by a binding site for Xenopus
glucocorticoid receptor accessory factor (XGRAF) and a contiguous
glucocorticoid response element (GRE) half-site. Here, we characterize
the protein:DNA complex formed by a cooperative interaction between
XGRAF, GR, and the DNA. We demonstrate that the complex contains XGRAF
by competition in a gel shift assay. The presence of GR is established
by two criteria: 1) size dependence of the XGRAF:GR:DNA complex on the
size of the GR component and 2) interference with complex formation by
GR antibody. Cooperative binding of XGRAF and GR to the DNA was
quantitated, showing that GR favors binding to XGRAF:DNA compared with
free DNA by a factor of 30. The cooperative interaction between XGRAF
and GR can occur on nicked DNA but is disrupted when 1 bp is inserted
between the XGRAF binding site and half-GRE. Significantly, this loss
of physical association in vitro correlates with loss of
XGRAF amplification of GR activity in transiently transfected primary
Xenopus hepatocytes. The simplest explanation for
cooperativity between XGRAF and GR is formation of a DNA-bound
heterodimer of these two proteins. This mechanism represents a new mode
of transcriptional regulation in which GR and a nonreceptor protein
form a heterodimer, with both partners contacting their specific DNA
sites simultaneously.
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| Endocrinology | Endocrine Reviews | J. Clin. End. & Metab. |
| Molecular Endocrinology | Recent Prog. Horm. Res. | All Endocrine Journals |