3.9 Article

A human estrogen receptor (ER)α mutation with differential responsiveness to nonsteroidal ligands:: Novel approaches for studying mechanism of ER action

Journal

MOLECULAR ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 7, Pages 1552-1564

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/me.2007-0570

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R24 CA 92865, R01 CA 18119, P50 CA114747, R01 CA082214, R01 CA 82214, R24 CA092865, P50 CA 114747, R01 CA018119] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDDK NIH HHS [R37 DK015556, R37 DK 15556] Funding Source: Medline

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Estrogens, acting through the estrogen receptors (ERs), play crucial roles in regulating the function of reproductive and other systems under physiological and pathological conditions. ER activity in regulating target genes is modulated by the binding of both steroidal and synthetic nonsteroidal ligands, with ligand binding inducing ERs to adopt various conformations that control their interactions with transcriptional coregulators. Previously, we developed an intramolecular folding sensor with a mutant form of ER alpha (ERG521T) that proved to be essentially unresponsive to the endogenous ligand 17 beta-estradiol, yet responded very well to certain synthetic ligands. In this study, we have characterized this G521T-ER mutation in terms of the potency and efficacy of receptor response toward several steroidal and nonsteroidal ligands in two different ways: directly, by ligand effects on mutant ER conformation (by the split-luciferase complementation system), and indirectly, by ligand effects on mutant ER transactivation. Full-length G521T-ER shows no affinity for estradiol and does not activate an estrogen-responsive reporter gene. The synthetic pyrazole agonist ligand propyl-pyrazole-triol is approximately 100-fold more potent than estradiol in inducing intramolecular folding and reporter gene transactivation with the mutant ER, whereas both ligands have high potency on wild-type ER. This estradiol-unresponsive mutant ER can also specifically highlight the agonistic property of the selective ER modulator, 4-hydroxytamoxifen, by reporter gene transactivation, even in the presence of estradiol, and it can exert a dominant-negative effect on estrogen-stimulated wild-type ER. This system provides a model for ER-mutants that show differential ligand responsiveness to gene activation to gain insight into the phenomenon of hormone resistance observed in endocrine therapies of ER-positive breast cancers.

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