Thyroid hormone response element half-site organization and its effect on thyroid hormone mediated transcription

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0101155

Language of the publication
English
Date
2014-06-27
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Paquette, Martin A.
  • Atlas, Ella
  • Wade, Mike G.
  • Yauk, Carole L.
Publisher
Public Library of Science

Abstract

Thyroid hormone (TH) exerts its effects by binding to the thyroid hormone receptor (TR), which binds to TH response elements (TREs) to regulate target gene expression. We investigated the relative ability of liganded homodimers TR and retinoid X receptor (RXR), and the heterodimer TR/RXR, to regulate gene expression for the TRE half-site organizations: direct repeat 4 (DR4), inverted repeat 0 (IR0) and everted repeat 6 (ER6). Luciferase reporter assays using a DR4 TRE suggest that both the TR homodimer and TR/RXR heterodimer regulate luciferase expression in the presence of their respective ligands. However, in the presence of the IR0 TRE, transfection with TR/RXR and RXR alone increased luciferase activity and there was no effect of TR alone. The presence of 9-cis-retinoic acid was necessary for luciferase expression, whereas TH treatment alone was insufficient. For the ER6 TRE, transfection with TR/RXR, TR alone and RXR alone (in the presence of their respective ligands) all caused a significant increase in luciferase activity. When both ligands were present, transfection with both TR/RXR caused more activation. Finally, we investigated the efficacy of the TR-antagonist 1-850 in inhibiting transcription by TR or TR/RXR at DR4 and ER6 TREs. We found that 1-850 did not suppress luciferase activation in the presence of TR/RXR for the ER6 TRE, suggesting conformational changes of the ligand binding domain of the TR when bound to different TRE half-site organizations. Collectively, the findings indicate that there are fundamental differences between TRE configurations that affect nuclear receptor interactions with the response element and ability to bind ligands and antagonists.

Plain language summary

Growth and development of the body, particularly the brain and sensory organs, is dependent on the action of thyroid hormone (TH). Interference with TH production or action, whether by chemical toxicity or dietary deficiency, can impair these processes causing long-term deficiencies in intelligence, among other adverse health outcomes. However, the effects of TH within cells are mediated by a complex series of biological events that are not completely understood. Developing a better understanding of these variables is required to interpret the effects of TH disruption and will help in the development of rapid tests to identify environmental chemicals that disrupt TH action, which is the long-term goal of this research. In this study, the complex molecular biology underlying TH interactions was investigated in cultured cells. It was found that there are fundamental differences between various DNA sequences that direct how genes respond to TH, which will need to be considered in developing chemical toxicity screening tools. These data are being used by Health Canada to develop a novel set of tests that can be used to evaluate the ability of environmental chemicals to interfere with TH action.

Subject

  • Health,
  • Health and safety

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Healthy environments, consumer safety and consumer products

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