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Site-directed estrogen receptor antibodies stabilize 4-hydroxytamoxifen ligand, but not estradiol, and indicate ligand-specific differences in the recognition of estrogen response element DNA in vitro
- Source :
- Steroids. 61:278-289
- Publication Year :
- 1996
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 1996.
-
Abstract
- Conformational differences between type I antiestrogen-liganded estrogen receptor and estradiol (E2)-liganded estrogen receptor (ER) are thought to be responsible for differentiating agonist versus antagonist ER activity at individual genes. To examine the impact of ER ligand on estrogen-response element (ERE) binding kinetics and receptor conformation, we quantitated the effect of site-directed, ER-specific antibodies raised against synthetic peptides corresponding to the DNA-binding domain of human ER on ER-ERE binding in vitro. Although 4-hydroxytamoxifen-liganded-ER (4-OHT-ER) and E2-ER bind a consensus ERE with equal high affinity, the stoichiometry of 4-OHT-ER-ERE binding at saturation is approximately 50% lower than that of E2-ER binding to all ERE sequences tested. In contrast, the ERE binding stoichiometry of tamoxifen aziridine-liganded ER (TAz-ER) is identical to that of E2-ER: one receptor dimer bound per ERE. The difference in binding stoichiometry is caused by dissociation of one molecule of 4-OHT from the ER as the dimeric receptor binds DNA. Addition of low concentrations of ER-specific polyclonal antibodies AT3A or AT3B prevented 4-OHT ligand dissociation, yielding an increase in specific 4-OHT-ER-ERE binding to a level equal to that of E2-ER- or TAz-ER-ERE binding. However, higher amounts of AT3A or AT3B inhibited specific ERE binding of both 4-OHT- and E2-ER. We conclude that differences in ER conformation when liganded with 4-OHT versus E2 are revealed by these antibodies and that such differences in receptor conformation may influence subsequent interaction of the receptor with other proteins necessary for transactivation.
- Subjects :
- medicine.drug_class
Molecular Sequence Data
Clinical Biochemistry
Response element
Estrogen receptor
Ligands
Biochemistry
Antigen-Antibody Reactions
Transactivation
Endocrinology
Antibody Specificity
Consensus Sequence
medicine
Humans
Receptor
Molecular Biology
Pharmacology
Hormone response element
Base Sequence
Estradiol
Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
DNA
Ligand (biochemistry)
Molecular biology
Receptor–ligand kinetics
Tamoxifen
Receptors, Estrogen
Estrogen
hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 0039128X
- Volume :
- 61
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Steroids
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2568a628dab1b8273a8765b6d649a4c9