The Nuclear Orphan Receptor CAR-Retinoid X Receptor Heterodimer Activates the Phenobarbital-Responsive Enhancer Module of the CYP2B Gene

P Honkakoski, I Zelko, T Sueyoshi… - Molecular and cellular …, 1998 - Taylor & Francis
Molecular and cellular biology, 1998Taylor & Francis
ABSTRACT PBREM, the phenobarbital-responsive enhancer module of the cytochrome P-
450 Cyp2b10 gene, contains two potential nuclear receptor binding sites, NR1 and NR2.
Consistent with the finding that anti-retinoid X receptor (RXR) could supershift the NR1-
nuclear protein complex, DNA affinity chromatography with NR1 oligonucleotides enriched
the nuclear orphan receptor RXR from the hepatic nuclear extracts of phenobarbital-treated
mice. In addition to RXR, the nuclear orphan receptor CAR was present in the same …
Abstract
PBREM, the phenobarbital-responsive enhancer module of the cytochrome P-450 Cyp2b10 gene, contains two potential nuclear receptor binding sites, NR1 and NR2. Consistent with the finding that anti-retinoid X receptor (RXR) could supershift the NR1-nuclear protein complex, DNA affinity chromatography with NR1 oligonucleotides enriched the nuclear orphan receptor RXR from the hepatic nuclear extracts of phenobarbital-treated mice. In addition to RXR, the nuclear orphan receptor CAR was present in the same enriched fraction. In the phenobarbital-treated mice, the binding of both CAR and RXR was rapidly increased before the induction of CYP2B10 mRNA. In vitro-translated CAR bound to NR1, but only in the presence of similarly prepared RXR. PBREM was synergistically activated by transfection of CAR and RXR in HepG2 and HEK293 cells when the NR1 site was functional. A CAR-RXR heterodimer has thus been characterized as atrans-acting factor for the phenobarbital-inducible Cyp2b10 gene.
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