The oncoprotein P75gag-v-erbA represses thyroid hormone induced transcription only via response elements containing palindromic half-sites
- PMID: 8761306
The oncoprotein P75gag-v-erbA represses thyroid hormone induced transcription only via response elements containing palindromic half-sites
Abstract
The v-erbA oncoprotein P75gag-v-erbA, derived from the thyroid hormone receptor alpha (TR alpha), functions as a transdominant transcriptional repressor. The mechanism by which P75gag-v-erbA acts is however poorly characterized. Here, we show that repression of TR alpha mediated transcription by P75gag-v-erbA in transformed erythroblasts is dependent on the structure of the thyroid hormone response element to which it binds. A very efficient repression was seen with hormone response elements having half-sites organized as everted repeats (ER), whereas repression was inefficient with directly repeated half-sites (DR). Promoters containing half-sites organized as an inverted palindrome (IR) gave an intermediate repression. Although P75gag-v-erbA failed to associate with the ligand binding domain of retinoid X (RXR) receptor in a two-hybrid test, the oncoprotein in nuclear extracts from transformed cells heterodimerised quantitatively with RXR upon binding to response elements of the DR type. On the other hand, both RXR/P75gag-v-erb heterodimers and other types of dimers formed on ER elements. P75gag-v-erbA also failed to bind to elements that contained only one half-site in vivo and in vitro. The data demonstrate that P75gag-v-erbA represses gene expression efficiently as a dimer, and suggest that thyroid hormone responsive genes that may be targets for the action of the oncoprotein are repressed most efficiently if they contain elements of the ER type.