Thyroid hormone receptor-associated proteins and general positive cofactors mediate thyroid hormone receptor function in the absence of the TATA box-binding …

JD Fondell, M Guermah, S Malik… - Proceedings of the …, 1999 - National Acad Sciences
JD Fondell, M Guermah, S Malik, RG Roeder
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1999National Acad Sciences
Coactivators previously implicated in ligand-dependent activation functions by thyroid
hormone receptor (TR) include p300 and CREB-binding protein (CBP), the steroid receptor
coactivator-1 (SRC-1)-related family of proteins, and the multicomponent TR-associated
protein (TRAP) complex. Here we show that two positive cofactors (PC2 and PC4) derived
from the upstream stimulatory activity (USA) cofactor fraction act synergistically to mediate
thyroid hormone (T3)-dependent activation either by TR or by a TR-TRAP complex in an in …
Coactivators previously implicated in ligand-dependent activation functions by thyroid hormone receptor (TR) include p300 and CREB-binding protein (CBP), the steroid receptor coactivator-1 (SRC-1)-related family of proteins, and the multicomponent TR-associated protein (TRAP) complex. Here we show that two positive cofactors (PC2 and PC4) derived from the upstream stimulatory activity (USA) cofactor fraction act synergistically to mediate thyroid hormone (T3)-dependent activation either by TR or by a TR-TRAP complex in an in vitro system reconstituted with purified factors and DNA templates. Significantly, the TRAP-mediated enhancement of activation by TR does not require the TATA box-binding protein-associated factors of TFIID. Furthermore, neither the pleiotropic coactivators CBP and p300 nor members of the SRC-1 family were detected in either the TR-TRAP complex or the other components of the in vitro assay system. These results show that activation by TR at the level of naked DNA templates is enhanced by cooperative functions of the TRAP coactivators and the general coactivators PC2 and PC4, and they further indicate a potential functional redundancy between TRAPs and TATA box-binding protein-associated factors in TFIID. In conjunction with earlier studies on other nuclear receptor-interacting cofactors, the present study also suggests a multistep pathway, involving distinct sets of cofactors, for activation of hormone responsive genes.
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