Molecular structure and biological function of the cancer-amplified nuclear receptor coactivator SRC-3/AIB1

L Liao, SQ Kuang, Y Yuan, SM Gonzalez… - The Journal of steroid …, 2002 - Elsevier
L Liao, SQ Kuang, Y Yuan, SM Gonzalez, BW O'Malley, J Xu
The Journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology, 2002Elsevier
Nuclear hormone receptors are ligand-dependent transcription factors that require
coactivators to regulate target gene expression. The steroid receptor coactivator-3 (SRC-3),
also known as p/CIP, RAC3, AIB1, ACTR and TRAM-1, is a cancer-amplified coactivator in
the SRC gene family that also contains SRC-1 and TIF2/GRIP1. SRC-3 interacts with
nuclear receptors and certain other transcription factors, recruits histone acetyltransferases
and methyltransferases for chromatin remodeling and facilitates target gene transcription …
Nuclear hormone receptors are ligand-dependent transcription factors that require coactivators to regulate target gene expression. The steroid receptor coactivator-3 (SRC-3), also known as p/CIP, RAC3, AIB1, ACTR and TRAM-1, is a cancer-amplified coactivator in the SRC gene family that also contains SRC-1 and TIF2/GRIP1. SRC-3 interacts with nuclear receptors and certain other transcription factors, recruits histone acetyltransferases and methyltransferases for chromatin remodeling and facilitates target gene transcription. Accumulated results from both ex vivo and animal model studies indicate that SRC-3 plays important roles in many biological processes involving cell proliferation, cell migration, cell differentiation, somatic growth, sexual maturation, female reproductive function, vasoprotection and breast cancer. This article summarizes our current knowledge about SRC-3 under the following topics: molecular cloning and characterization; molecular structure and functional mechanisms; SRC-3 as a molecular target of growth factors and cytokines; organization and expression of the SRC-3 gene; generation and characterization of SRC-3 knockout mice; role of SRC-3 in the vasoprotective effects of estrogen; role of SRC-3 in cell migration, proliferation and cancers.
Elsevier