Co-activators and co-repressors in the integration of transcriptional responses

J Torchia, C Glass, MG Rosenfeld - Current opinion in cell biology, 1998 - Elsevier
J Torchia, C Glass, MG Rosenfeld
Current opinion in cell biology, 1998Elsevier
The nuclear hormone receptors are DNA binding transcription factors that are regulated by
binding of ligands, switching them from an inactive or repressive state to gene-activating
functions. Recent evidence supports the hypothesis that many nuclear receptors switch, in a
ligand-dependent manner, between binding of a multicomponent co-repressor complex
containing histone deacetyltransferase activity, and binding of a co-activator complex
containing factors with histone acetyltransferase activity that are further regulated by diverse …
The nuclear hormone receptors are DNA binding transcription factors that are regulated by binding of ligands, switching them from an inactive or repressive state to gene-activating functions. Recent evidence supports the hypothesis that many nuclear receptors switch, in a ligand-dependent manner, between binding of a multicomponent co-repressor complex containing histone deacetyltransferase activity, and binding of a co-activator complex containing factors with histone acetyltransferase activity that are further regulated by diverse signal transduction pathways. The identification of these limiting co-repressor and co-activator complexes and their specific interaction motifs, in concert with solution of the structures of the receptor ligand-binding domain in apo (empty) and ligand bound forms, indicates a common molecular mechanism by which these factors activate and repress gene transcription.
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