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This version published online on January 19, 2006
Molecular Endocrinology, doi:10.1210/me.2005-0481
A more recent version of this article appeared on September 1, 2006
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Submitted on November 29, 2005
Accepted on January 11, 2006

Lives and Times of Nuclear Receptors

Elaine T. Alarid*

Department of Physiology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: alarid{at}physiology.wisc.edu.

Down-regulation of receptor in response to ligand was one of the earliest functional readouts of steroid hormone action. The loss of total receptor content upon stimulation, referred to initially as receptor "processing", was carefully described with respect to receptor nuclear transformation or tight nuclear binding. It was these early studies that were the first to note a correlation between receptor turn-over and induction of gene transcription, leading to the proposal that down-regulation of receptor was involved in mechanisms of transcriptional activation. This idea has now attracted renewed attention with the discovery that ligand-induced "processing" in the form of proteolysis is carried out by the 26S proteasome, a multicatalytic enzyme whose activity is directly coupled to cell-cycle control, signal transduction, and importantly, transcription. Here, we review our current understanding of the mechanism and relevance of proteolysis to receptor function based on general concepts that have emerged from analyses of liganded-members of the nuclear receptor family.


Key words: transcription • nuclear receptors • steroid hormone • proteasome • heat shock proteins

NURSA Molecule Pages Link:

Nuclear Receptors:   TRα  |  RARα  |  PPARα  |  PPARγ  |  VDR  |  ERα  |  GR  |  MR  |  PR  |  AR
Coregulators:   TRIP1  |  E6AP  |  UBCH7  |  BAG-1  |  BRCA1  |  SRC-1  |  NCOR  |  RPF1
Ligands:   17β-Estradiol  |  RU486



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