ERS07 Mechanism Of Action Of Steroid Hormones Flashcards

1
Q

Steroid hormones

A

Steroidogenesis: ALL derived from Cholesterol (C27)
—> progressive **loss of carbons + **hydroxylation (oxidation)

Key features:

  1. Small hydrophobic (∵ benzene ring)
  2. Subtle structural differences between them

C18 steroid / Estrane
- Estrogen —> Estradiol

C19 steroid / Androstane
- Androgens —> Testosterone

C21 steroid / Pregnane

  • Progestogens —> Progesterone
  • Glucocorticoids —> Cortisol
  • Mineralocorticoids —> Aldosterone
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2
Q

MOA of steroid hormones

A
Bound to carrier protein in bloodstream
—> diffuse through plasma membrane
—> bind to Cytosolic receptor (e.g. Glucocorticoid receptor) / Nuclear receptor (e.g. Estrogen receptor)
—> Conformational change of receptor
—> Bind to DNA
—> Turn on transcription
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3
Q

***Steroid hormone receptors

A

ALL contain 5 common regions

  1. Ligand-binding / Inhibitor-binding domain (LBD) (e.g. Heat-shock protein HSP: an inhibitor)
    - mediate ligand-binding
    - ***mediate regulation of NLS
  2. Dimerisation sites
    - 橫跨 LBD, DBD
  3. Nuclear localisation signal (NLS)
    - 屬於LBD
    - hinge between LBD and DBD
    —> allow dimerised protein to go into nucleus
  4. DNA-binding domain (DBD)
    - Zinc finger domain
    - bind to HRE
  5. Transactivation domain (TAD) / Variable / Regulatory domain
    - mediate activating effect of receptor
    - ***offer specificity
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4
Q

***MOA of Glucocorticoid receptor (GR)

A

HSP bound to GR (also block DBD from binding to DNA)
—> retained in cytoplasm when without hormone binding
—> Cortisol bind to GR
—> HSP dissociate from GR
—> GR conformational change
—> Dimerisation of GR
—> Exposing DBD, TAD, NLS
—> GR dimer go through nuclear pore into nucleus by NLS
—> DBD mediate binding of GR to Glucocorticoid Response Element (GRE) (a DNA sequence within **promoter of gene)
—> TAD mediate interaction of GR with **
Co-activator proteins (Co-activator communicate with Basal transcription complex bound to TATA box)
—> Turn on gene transcription, expression

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5
Q
  1. Early findings indicating regulation of gene expression at transcriptional level by steroid hormones
    (結論: Steroid hormone regulate Puffing —> mRNA synthesis)
A

***Ecdysone (steroid prohormone by insects)
—> regulate “puffing” of insect salivary polytene chromosomes

Polytene chromosomes: Large chromosomes undergone multiple cycles of DNA synthesis without cell division (2^10 = 1024)
- contain invariant bands (85% DNA)
—> allow us to follow what happen to a particular gene locus

Add Ecdysone to salivary gland preparation
—> Changes in pattern of bands
—> Deconsensation and Recondensation of bands (**Puffing)
—> Characteristic puffing patterns follow precise temporal sequence
—> Newly synthesised RNAs labelled by **
3H-uridine localised to puffs (presence of **mRNA synthesis)
—> **
Conclusion: Ecdysone coordinates specific programs of gene expression + Puff is location of active gene transcription / mRNA synthesis

Ashburner hypothesis: Primary + Delayed secondary responses

Primary response:
Steroid hormone binds to Steroid hormone receptor (in salivary gland cells)
—> bind to promoter of gene / activate primary response genes
—> first puffing
—> synthesis of primary response proteins

Delayed secondary response:
—> primary response protein shut off primary response gene + turn on secondary response gene
—> late puffing
—> synthesis of secondary response proteins

Later (1970), use of radioactive labelled hormones to detect steroid hormone receptors and their association with high-affinity binding sites in chromatin
—> Labels seen under microscope to **move from cytoplasm to nucleus suggesting effect on gene expression
—> Specific sites labelled on chromatin (~50-100 sites / cell = number of genes regulated)
—> **
Different specific chromatin sites in different cells acted on by different hormones

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6
Q
  1. Biochemical analysis and purification of Hormone-receptor complexes
    (結論: 要有Conformational change)
A

Use of 3H-labelled hormones + High affinity analogs e.g. Dexamethasone
—> Able to detect hormone-binding proteins (intracellular receptors)

Lysate preparation (e.g. liver cell) (contain glucocorticoid receptor) + 3H-Dexamethasone
1. Incubate at 4oC
—> No binding to chromatin on filter, Low mobility in ion-exchange column
2. Incubate at 37oC
—> Binding to chromatin on filter, Increased mobility in column

**Conclusion:
Steroid hormone receptors after binding to hormone
—> undergo **
“transformation” / “conformational change” (that **require energy + change surface charge of protein)
—> before Hormone-receptor complexes can bind to Chromatin
—> **
Model of steroid hormone proposed

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7
Q

Purification of glucocorticoid receptor with help of radiolabelled binding analogs (e.g. Dexamethasone)

A

Glucocorticoid receptor will be labelled with radiolabel once bound to Dexamethasone
—> purify through many steps (based on charge, size, shape, affinity etc.)
—> 10^3-10^4 / cell (trace amounts) among 10^10 protein molecules per cell
—> ***SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
—> Crude extract (a smear) —> Purified GR (single band on gel electrophoresis)

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8
Q
  1. Identification of glucocorticoid-responsive genes and cis-acting sequences required for hormonal activation of transcription - “Hormone response elements”
    (結論: 研究咩係HRE)
A
  1. Question: What are glucocorticoid responsive genes?
    - MMTV (Mouse mammary tumour virus) genes first identified as being glucocorticoid-responsive
    —> stimulated by glucocorticoid
    —> replication
  2. Question: Where does GR bind within regulatory sequences (promoter) of responsive gene?
    - Direct binding of GR to MMTV DNA demonstrated in **EM studies
    - Binding region defined by **
    deletion analysis e.g. -84 to -305 of MMTV transcription-control region; region sufficient to specify glucocorticoid responsiveness
    - HRE further defined by DNAase I ***footprinting analysis + sequence comparison
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9
Q

Deletion analysis

A

Deletion of certain DNA sequence

—> Disappearance of RNA transcript

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10
Q

DNAase I footprinting analysis

A

DNAase I = DNA endonuclease —> cut DNA at random places

Add DNAase I to DNA
—> random cutting at multiple places
—> all sorts of DNA fragments
—> uniform ladder on electrophoresis

If GR added, ***GR-bound-DNA regions are protected from DNAase I
—> gaps appear on electrophoresis (some fragments missing —> lighter area: “footprint”)
—> number of gaps = number of binding sites
—> called “Hormone Response Element” (HRE)

  • Same HRE for Glucocorticoid receptor, Aldosterone receptor, Androgen receptor, Progesterone receptor
  • Special HRE for Estrogen receptor
  • **Features of HRE:
    1. Double binding sites / 2 half sites
    2. Dyad (Rotational) symmetry —> receptors bind as dimers —> stronger interaction with HRE
    3. HREs can be placed in front of other genes to make them hormone-responsive
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11
Q
  1. Cloning and functional analysis of steroid hormone receptors
    (結論: identify到唔同region既DNA sequence)
A

GR cDNA isolated by expression cloning
—> ALL steroid hormone receptors cloned similarly / by low stringency hybridisation
—> cDNA sequence allow prediction of protein structure and function
—> Conserved domains defined based on sequence homology

  1. DNA binding domain / Domain C (small domain, binding to HRE) —> **highest homology (最conserved)
    - GR, MR, PR have same HRE —> 94% similar in cDNA sequence
    - GR, **
    ER recognise different HRE —> 54% similar in cDNA sequence

DBD:
—> contains 2 copies of C4 zinc finger motif (2 sets of 4 Cysteine residues)
—> chelate Zinc ion (Zinc help mediate DNA binding)
—> 1 Zinc finger carry **NRS (nucleotide recognition signal) for HRE binding
—> 1 Zinc finger carry **
Dimerisation domain (dimerise with the other monomer)

  1. Ligand binding domain / Domain E (C-terminal) (larger domain) —> ***less conserved (15-57% homology)
  2. Others:
    - Variable domain (N-terminal) (i.e. ***not conserved) e.g. Transactivation domain
    —> for specificity (turn on specific genes)
    —> ∴ even though binding to same HRE but still are different in action

Technique of expression cloning:
- Purified GR —> injected into mouse —> Ab raised against GR —> 攞翻d Ab 出黎做Expression cloning / Library screening

  • Identify mRNA sequence from liver cells
    —> convert mRNA into cDNA by reverse transcriptase from retrovirus
    —> allow mRNA sequence to be cloned into vectors
    —> vectors carried in bacteria
    —> multiple colonies formed by GR-expressing bacteria
    —> bacteria lifted onto a nitrocellulose filter
    —> **Ab recognise GR expressed by bacteria
    —> staining technique
    —> **
    pinpoint a particular colony of bacteria with expression of GR
    —> repeated screening
    —> get a **pure colony expressing only a particular cDNA
    —> **
    sequence cDNA
    —> determine a.a. sequence, protein structure, function
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12
Q

Estrogen: Genomic (Traditional) pathway vs Non-genomic (Nongenotropic) pathway

A
Genomic pathway:
Estrogen bind to Estrogen receptor in ***nucleus
—> conformational change
—> bind to HRE / DNA
—> turn on gene expression

Non-genomic pathway (Estrogen receptor NOT need to interact with DNA):
Estrogen bind to Estrogen receptor on **plasma membrane
—> Estrogen receptor interact with kinase
—> **
Kinase activate **pre-existing protein function / go into nucleus to **modify transcription factor
—> turn on gene expression
—> ∴ require only the LBD of receptor and its extranuclear localisation (NO need DBD)
—> faster action

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13
Q

Non-genomic pathway for Estrogen / Androgen receptor

A

Mainly found in bone cells

  • protect osteoblasts / osteocytes from dying (Anti-apoptotic effect)
  • Osteoporosis: Non-genomic pathway not strong enough / activated enough
  • mediated through ***Serine/Threonine protein kinase (e.g. Akt, ERK, RSK) by direct phosphorylation of proteins
  1. Inactivating Bad protein (mediate cell death) —> Bcl2 protein freed from Bad protein —> Antiapoptosis
  2. Activating transcription of some target genes via Elk-1/CREB —> Antiapoptosis

Bisphosphonate: act on these pathways to prevent bone loss
Raloxifene: SERM —> ↓ osteoclasts-mediated bone resorption, ↑ osteoblast-mediated bone formation

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