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. 1995 Dec 15;270(50):29983-90.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.270.50.29983.

Evidence for an anti-parallel orientation of the ligand-activated human androgen receptor dimer

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Free article

Evidence for an anti-parallel orientation of the ligand-activated human androgen receptor dimer

E Langley et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Domain interactions of the human androgen receptor (AR) dimer were investigated using a protein-protein interaction assay in which the NH2- and carboxyl-terminal regions of human AR were fused to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae GAL4 DNA-binding domain and herpes simplex virus VP16 transactivation domain to produce chimeric proteins. Transcriptional activation of a GAL4 luciferase reporter vector up to 100-fold was greater than Fos/Jun leucine zipper binding, indicating stable AR interaction between AR NH2-terminal residues 1-503 and steroid-binding domain residues 624-919 that was specific for and dependent on androgen binding to the steroid-binding domain and was inhibited by anti-androgen binding. Deletion mutagenesis within the NH2-terminal region indicated transactivation domain residues 142-337 were not required for dimerization, whereas deletions near the NH2 terminus (delta 14-150) or NH2-terminal to the DNA-binding domain (delta 339-499) reduced or eliminated the AR interaction, respectively. An NH2-/NH2-terminal interaction was also observed, but no interaction was detected between ligand-free or bound steroid-binding domains. The results indicate that high affinity androgen binding promotes interactions between the NH2-terminal and steroid-binding domains of human AR, raising the possibility of an androgen-induced anti-parallel AR dimer.

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