Concepedia

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Human estrogen receptor transactivational capacity is determined by both cellular and promoter context and mediated by two functionally distinct intramolecular regions.

648

Citations

13

References

1994

Year

TLDR

The study used ER mutants to assess how the TAF1 and TAF2 transactivation domains drive transcription in a cell‑ and promoter‑dependent manner. The data show that TAF1 is the main ER activator while TAF2 acts as a facilitator, with their requirement varying by promoter; tamoxifen’s partial agonism arises when TAF2 is dispensable and TAF1 can act independently, explaining its tissue‑specific effects.

Abstract

We have used a series of human estrogen receptor (ER) mutants to evaluate the cell- and promoter-specific transcriptional activities of the TAF1 and TAF2 transactivation regions within the human ER. We show that the manifestation of TAF1 or TAF2 function depends strongly upon promoter context; on certain promoters, both the TAF1 and TAF2 activators are required for wild-type transcriptional activity, whereas on other promoters, the TAF1 and TAF2 activators function independently. Using these constructs, we show that the antagonist activity of the triphenylethylene-derived antiestrogens, e.g. tamoxifen, arises from their intrinsic inability to activate ER TAF2 function. However, on certain promoters, these antiestrogens efficiently activate gene transcription through ER. Consistent with this observation, the TAF2 function of the ER is not required on all promoters. In these TAF2-independent promoter contexts, TAF2 function may be provided by a separate transcription factor bound to the promoter. These data suggest that 1) TAF1 may be the major transcriptional activator of the ER; and 2) TAF2 functions as a transcriptional facilitator. On promoters where TAF2 function is provided independently of the ER, the TAF1 function of the ER can function independently of TAF2 activity, allowing triphenylethylene-derived antiestrogens to demonstrate partial agonist activity. These observations provide a possible molecular explanation for the tissue-specific partial agonist properties of tamoxifen and related triphenylethylene antiestrogens observed in vivo.

References

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