Nuclear receptors regulate metabolic pathways in response to changes in the environment by appropriate alterations in gene expression of key metabolic enzymes. Here, a computational search approach based on iteratively built hidden Markov models of nuclear receptors was used to identify a human nuclear receptor, termed hPAR, that is expressed in liver and intestines. hPAR was found to be efficiently activated by pregnanes and by clinically used drugs including rifampicin, an antibiotic known to selectively induce human but not murine CYP3A expression. The CYP3A drugmetabolizing enzymes are expressed in gut and liver in response to environmental chemicals and clinically used drugs. Interestingly, hPAR is not activated by pregnenolone 16␣-carbonitrile, which is a potent inducer of murine CYP3A genes and an activator of the mouse receptor PXR.1. Furthermore, hPAR was found to bind to and trans-activate through a conserved regulatory sequence present in human but not murine CYP3A genes. These results provide evidence that hPAR and PXR.1 may represent orthologous genes from different species that have evolved to regulate overlapping target genes in response to pharmacologically distinct CYP3A activators, and have potential implications for the in vitro identification of drug interactions important to humans.The recent progress made in determining the full genomic sequences of model organisms as well as the rapid accumulation of sequence data from the human genome has opened up new possibilities to determine the functional organization of genomes by computational approaches (1). Multiple alignments of members of different protein families followed by homology searching are powerful methods to infer gene function from sequence data as well as to identify novel genes within a given gene family. Hidden Markov models (HMMs) are a general statistical modeling technique that can be used as formal, fully probabilistic forms of sequence profiles (2, 3), describing the consensus of a set of sequences. This approach toward the identification and functional characterization of novel genes is particularly amenable to evolutionary conserved gene families consisting of a large number of orthologs and paralogs. The nuclear receptors constitute one such large gene family that is structurally and functionally conserved and represented within different metazoan phylae from cnidarians to vertebrates (4). These receptors are conditionally regulated transcription factors that exert their effects by interacting with small lipophilic ligands followed by sequence-specific binding of the receptor to DNA sequences called hormone response elements (HREs). Binding of the receptor to DNA results in changes in gene expression of specific target genes (5).Steroid hormones were the first group of small, lipophilic molecules identified as nuclear receptor ligands. Today, the number of substances known to regulate the activity of this group of receptors is represented by a large and chemically diverse group of molecules including retinoids, vi...
The organization of DNA in chromatin is involved in repressing basal transcription of a number of inducible genes. Biochemically defined multiprotein complexes such as SWI/SNF (J. Côté, J. Quinn, J. L. Workman, and C. L. Peterson, Science 265:53-60, 1994) and nucleosome remodeling factor (T. Tsukiyama and C. Wu, Cell 83:1011-1020, 1995) disrupt nucleosomes in vitro and are thus candidates for complexes which cause chromatin decondensation during gene induction. In this study we show that the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), a hormone-inducible transcription factor, stimulates the nucleosome-disrupting activity of the SWI/SNF complex partially purified either from HeLa cells or from rat liver tissue. This GR-mediated stimulation of SWI/SNF nucleosome disruption depended on the presence of a glucocorticoid response element. The in vitro-reconstituted nucleosome probes used in these experiments harbored 95 bp of synthetic DNA-bending sequence in order to rotationally position the DNA. The GR-dependent stimulation of SWI/SNF-mediated nucleosome disruption, as evaluated by DNase I footprinting, was 2.7-to 3.8-fold for the human SWI/SNF complex and 2.5-to 3.2-fold for the rat SWI/SNF complex. When nuclear factor 1 (NF1) was used instead of GR, there was no stimulation of SWI/SNF activity in the presence of a mononucleosome containing an NF1 binding site. On the other hand, the SWI/SNF nucleosome disruption activity increased the access of NF1 for its nucleosomal binding site. No such effect was seen on binding of GR to its response element. Our results suggest that GR, but not NF1, is able to target the nucleosome-disrupting activity of the SWI/SNF complex.DNA in eukaryotic cells associates with proteins called histones to form nucleosomes, which together with nonhistone proteins form a higher-order structure, chromatin (22). It is now well established that chromatin not only provides a DNA storage function but is also involved in gene regulation (41,63). When the synthesis of histone H4 is inhibited in yeast cells, several genes which are tightly regulated are expressed in a constitutive manner (14). The mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) promoter, which is repressed in the absence of glucocorticoid hormone, becomes constitutively expressed when the nucleosome density is decreased by coinjection of competitor DNA, as shown in Xenopus oocytes (43). Injection of single-stranded DNA into Xenopus oocytes leads to nucleosome assembly coupled to DNA synthesis. This results in a tighter chromatin structure which confers a more stringent repression of transcription than chromatin formed on DNA injected in the double-stranded form (2). Several studies suggest that chromatin acts both by excluding certain upstreamgene-specific transcription factors from their recognition sites (1, 4) and by inhibiting access of the basic transcription machinery to the transcriptional initiation site (17,30,33,64).Regulatory regions of many inducible genes in mammals and yeast have positioned nucleosomes. Examples include the MMTV promoter (53), the...
A DNA-bending sequence has been used for in vitro reconstitution of nucleosomes in order to direct a nuclear factor 1 (NF-1) binding site into different nucleosome positions. By this strategy nucleosomes were obtained that had one of two rotational positions of the NF-1 binding site, one oriented toward the periphery and the other toward the histone octamer, translationally positioned 50 and 45 base pairs, respectively, from the nucleosome dyad. The affinity of partially purified NF-1 for these nucleosomal targets was compared with its affinity for free DNA by dimethylsulfate methylation protection and DNase I footprinting assays. The binding affinity of NF-1 to all nucleosomal targets was reduced 100-300-fold compared with its affinity for free DNA. The two rotational settings of the NF-1 site showed the same binding affinity for NF-1 as did other nucleosome constructs in which the NF-1 binding site was translationally positioned from 10 to 40 base pairs from the nucleosome dyad. We conclude that the nucleosomal inhibition of NF-1 binding is an inherent characteristic of NF-1 since another transcription factor, the glucocorticoid receptor, is able to bind to its DNA site in a nucleosome.
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