A molecular switch regulating transcriptional repression and activation of PPARγ.
Jinsai ShangSarah A MosureJie ZhengRichard BrustJared BassAshley NicholsLaura A SoltPatrick R GriffinDouglas J KojetinPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
Nuclear receptor (NR) transcription factors use a conserved activation function-2 (AF-2) helix 12 mechanism for agonist-induced coactivator interaction and NR transcriptional activation. In contrast, ligand-induced corepressor-dependent NR repression appears to occur through structurally diverse mechanisms. We report two crystal structures of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) in an inverse agonist/corepressor-bound transcriptionally repressive conformation. Helix 12 is displaced from the solvent-exposed active conformation and occupies the orthosteric ligand-binding pocket enabled by a conformational change that doubles the pocket volume. Paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE) NMR and chemical crosslinking mass spectrometry confirm the repressive helix 12 conformation. PRE NMR also defines the mechanism of action of the corepressor-selective inverse agonist T0070907, and reveals that apo-helix 12 exchanges between transcriptionally active and repressive conformations-supporting a fundamental hypothesis in the NR field that helix 12 exchanges between transcriptionally active and repressive conformations.
Keyphrases
- dna binding
- transcription factor
- molecular dynamics simulations
- magnetic resonance
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- gene expression
- single molecule
- insulin resistance
- crystal structure
- drug induced
- molecular dynamics
- adipose tissue
- magnetic resonance imaging
- liquid chromatography
- solid state
- endothelial cells
- type diabetes
- heat shock
- oxidative stress
- ionic liquid
- binding protein
- high performance liquid chromatography
- genome wide identification