Summary:
Nuclear hormone receptors act as ligand activated transcription factors. Hormonal response in vivo is, however,
modulated at various levels beyond the mere activation of hormone receptors by their respective ligands. There
is a great variability of particular arrangements of HRE and receptors of the TR/RAR subfamily use extensive
dimerization to produce a particular dimer with optimal affinity for HRE in question. Hormonal response is
mediated by complex hormone responsive units (HRU), which integrate HRE together with other regulatory
sequences. Some hormone responsive genes may themselves code transcription factors or other regulatory
proteins, underlying delayed primary and secondary responses. In addition to transcription activation, nuclear
receptors enter repressive interactions with unrelated transcription factors like AP-1 or NF-kB. Genes for coding
nuclear receptors are subjected to homologous downregulation. Functioning of nuclear receptors might be
modulated by phosphorylation, which can underly ligand-independent activation. Nuclear receptors are mutated
and/or disregulated in various pathologies, like hormone resistance syndromes of cancer.
Key words:
dimerization, hormone-responsive units, primary and secondary response, homologous
|