Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (proteasome)
28,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In eukaryotic cells, the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is the major mechanism for the targeted degradation of proteins with short half-lives. The covalent attachment of ubiquitin to lysine residues of targeted proteins is a signal for the recognition and rapid degradation by the proteasome, a large multi-subunit protease. In this report, we demonstrate that the human estrogen receptor (ER) protein is rapidly degraded in mammalian cells in an estradiol-dependent manner. The treatment of mammalian cells with the proteasome inhibitor MG132 inhibits activity of the proteasome and blocks ER degradation, suggesting that ER protein is turned over through the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. In addition, we show that in vitro ER degradation depends on ubiquitin-activating E1 enzyme (UBA) and ubiquitin-conjugating E2 enzymes (UBCs), and the proteasome inhibitors MG132 and lactacystin block ER protein degradation in vitro. Furthermore, the UBA/UBCs and proteasome inhibitors promote the accumulation of higher molecular weight forms of ER. The UBA and UBCs, which promote ER degradation in vitro, have no significant effect on human progesterone receptor and human thyroid hormone receptor beta proteins.
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PMID:Proteasome-dependent degradation of the human estrogen receptor. 1005 59

In MCF-7 breast cancer cells, estradiol (E2) and pure antiestrogen RU 58668 down-regulate the estrogen receptor (ER). Interestingly, the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX) abrogated solely the effect of E2 suggesting a selective difference in the degradation of the receptor induced by estrogenic and antiestrogenic stimulations. A panel of lysosome inhibitors (i.e. bafilomycin, chloroquine, NH4Cl, and monensin), calpain inhibitors (calpastatin and PD 150606) and proteasome inhibitors (lactacystin and proteasome inhibitor I) were tested to assess this hypothesis. Among all inhibitors tested, lactacystin and proteasome inhibitor I were the sole inhibitors to abrogate the elimination of the receptor induced by both E2 and RU 58668; this selective effect was also recorded in cells prelabeled with [3H]tamoxifen aziridine before exposure to these ligands. Hence, differential sensitivity to CHX seems to be linked to the different mechanisms which target proteins for proteasome-mediated destruction. Moreover, the two tested proteasome inhibitors produced a slight increase of ER concentration in cells not exposed to any ligand, suggesting also the involvement of proteasome in receptor turnover.
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PMID:Implication of proteasome in estrogen receptor degradation. 1021 32

Regulation of estrogen receptor (ER) concentration is a key component in limiting estrogen responsiveness in target cells. Yet the mechanisms governing ER concentration in the lactotrope cells of the anterior pituitary, a major site of estrogen action, are undetermined. In this study, we used a lactotrope cell line, PR1, to explore regulation of ER protein by estrogen. Estrogen treatment resulted in an approximate 60% decrease in ER steady state protein levels. Suprisingly, the decline in ER protein was apparent within 1 h of estrogen treatment and occurred in the absence of protein synthesis and transcription. Direct regulation of ER protein was further confirmed by pulse chase analysis, which showed that ER protein half-life was shortened from greater than 3 h to 1 h in the presence of estrogen. The estrogen-induced degradation of ER protein could be prevented by pretreatment with peptide aldehyde inhibitors of proteasome protease whereas inhibitors of calpain and lysosomal proteases were ineffective. Inhibition of proteasome activity maintained ER protein at a level equivalent to control cells not stimulated with estrogen but increased estrogen-binding activity by 1.75-fold. Proteolytic regulation of ER by the proteasome is not limited to pituitary lactotrope cells but is also operational in MCF-7 breast cancer cells, suggesting that this may be a common regulatory pathway used by estrogen. These studies describe a nongenomic action of estrogen that involves nuclear ER: rapid proteolysis of ER protein via a proteasome-mediated pathway.
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PMID:Proteasome-mediated proteolysis of estrogen receptor: a novel component in autologous down-regulation. 1047 43

Recently, Pregnane X receptor (PXR), a new member of the nuclear receptor superfamily, was shown to mediate the effects of several steroid hormones, such as progesterone, glucocorticoid, pregnenolone, and xenobiotics on cytochrome P450 3A genes (CYP3A) through the specific DNA sequence for CYP3A, suggesting that PXR may play a role in steroid hormone metabolism. In this paper, we demonstrated that phthalic acid and nonylphenol, endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), stimulated PXR-mediated transcription at concentrations comparable to those at which they activate estrogen receptor-mediated transcription using a transient reporter gene expression assay in COS-7 cells. However, bisphenol A, another EDC, had no effect on PXR-mediated transcription, although this chemical significantly enhanced ER-mediated transcription. In the yeast two-hybrid protein interaction assay, PXR interacted with two nuclear receptor coactivator proteins, steroid hormone receptor coactivator-1 and receptor interacting protein 140, in the presence of phthalic acid or nonylphenol. Thus, EDC-occupied PXR may regulate its specific gene expression through the receptor-coactivator interaction. In contrast, these EDCs had no effect on the interaction between PXR and suppressor for gal 1, a component of proteasome. Finally, the expression of CYP3A1 mRNA in the liver of rats exposed to phthalic acid or nonylphenol markedly increased compared with that in rats treated with estradiol, bisphenol A, or ethanol as assessed by competitive RT-PCR. These data suggest that EDCs may affect endocrine functions by altering steroid hormone metabolism through PXR.
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PMID:Endocrine disrupting chemicals, phthalic acid and nonylphenol, activate Pregnane X receptor-mediated transcription. 1070 59

Tamoxifen (TAM) is a highly effective selective estrogen receptor (ER) modulator used extensively for the treatment and prevention of breast cancer. However, prolonged treatment of women with TAM may be a risk factor for endometrial cancer, and research in our laboratory is focused on the development of selective aryl hydrocarbon receptor modulators that can be used in combination with TAM to improve its efficacy in the breast and inhibit TAM-induced endometrial effects. This study investigated the effects of the selective aryl hydrocarbon receptor modulators 6-methyl-1,3,8-trichlorodibenzofuran (6-MCDF) alone and in combination with TAM in the carcinogen-induced mammary tumor model and in the ovariectomized uterotropic assay using female Sprague Dawley rats. The lowest effective dose of 6-MCDF that inhibited tumor growth was 50 microg/kg/day, and TAM was antitumorigenic at a dose of 100 microg/kg/day. In animals cotreated with TAM + 6-MCDF at doses of 100, 50, or 25 microg/kg/day of each compound, complete inhibition of mammary tumor growth was observed at all doses, and the results are consistent with a more than additive antitumorigenic response for the low dose group (25 + 25 microg/kg) and additive interactions at the 50 and 100 microg/kg doses. In a separate experiment, 6-MCDF (800 microg/kg) inhibited TAM-induced peroxidase activity and progesterone receptor binding in the ovariectomized rat uterus but did not affect TAM-induced bone growth in ovariectomized rats. This study also investigated the effects of TAM and 6-MCDF alone and in combination on ERalpha protein levels in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells as a model for studying interactions between these compounds. The results show that 6-MCDF decreased TAM-induced ERalpha levels in the absence or presence of 17beta-estradiol through proteasome activation, and these interactions may contribute to the observed combined antitumorigenic effects of these compounds.
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PMID:Tamoxifen-induced antitumorigenic/antiestrogenic action synergized by a selective aryl hydrocarbon receptor modulator. 1135 3

The human estrogen receptor alpha-isoform (ERalpha) is a nuclear transcription factor that displays a complex pharmacology. In addition to classical agonists and antagonists, the transcriptional activity of ERalpha can be regulated by selective estrogen receptor modulators, a new class of drugs whose relative agonist/antagonist activity is determined by cell context. It has been demonstrated that the binding of different ligands to ERalpha results in the formation of unique ERalpha-ligand conformations. These conformations have been shown to influence ERalpha-cofactor binding and, therefore, have a profound impact on ERalpha pharmacology. In this study, we demonstrate that the nature of the bound ligand also influences the stability of ERalpha, revealing an additional mechanism by which the pharmacological activity of a compound is determined. Of note we found that although all ERalpha-ligand complexes can be ubiquitinated and degraded by the 26 S proteasome in vivo, the mechanisms by which they are targeted for proteolysis appear to be different. Specifically, for agonist-activated ERalpha, an inverse relationship between transcriptional activity and receptor stability was observed. This relationship does not extend to selective estrogen receptor modulators and pure antagonists. Instead, it appears that with these compounds, the determinant of receptor stability is the ligand-induced conformation of ERalpha. We conclude that the different conformational states adopted by ERalpha in the presence of different ligands influence transcriptional activity directly by regulating cofactor binding and indirectly by modulating receptor stability.
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PMID:The human estrogen receptor-alpha is a ubiquitinated protein whose stability is affected differentially by agonists, antagonists, and selective estrogen receptor modulators. 1147 6

The heat shock proteins (HSPs) are molecular chaperones that are emerging as biochemical regulators of cell growth, apoptosis, protein homeostasis and intracellular targeting of peptides. The immunological function of the HSPs are imparted by tissue specific peptides associated with the HSPs and as such autologous cancer derived HSP-peptide complexes are unique therapeutic agents. Since a majority of the intracellular peptides are generated by the proteasome, we examined the consequence of abrogation of proteasome function by proteasome inhibitors (PIs) such as Lactacystin, MG-132 and LLM on the growth and induction profile of HSP70 and gp96 using hematopoietic, lymphoid, and epithelial derived cancer cell lines. The effect on growth was measured by the XTT assay and induction of the heat shock proteins by western blot analyses using HSP70 and gp96 specific antibodies. Of the PIs tested, cancer cells, were most sensitive to MG-132 and least sensitive to LLM. MG-132 also showed a 10-fold differential sensitivity between estrogen receptor positive, (ER+) MCF-7 cells and negative cells, (ER-) MDA-MB-231. Induction of heat shock proteins, gp96 and HSP70 was, however, noted in response to LLM. Since LLM exhibited minimal cytotoxic effect, metabolic stress that results in induction of HSPs may not be translated in cell growth inhibition and that there may exist a cell-type specific phenomenon in the HSP response to PI mediated metabolic stress.
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PMID:Proteasome inhibitors differentially affect heat shock protein response in cancer cells. 1156 76

Synthetic estrogen receptor ligands such as tamoxifen and raloxifene produce biologic responses which can be either estrogenic or anti-estrogenic, depending upon the tissue in which their action is examined. To reflect the fact that they are not 'pure' antagonists, such ligands have been more accurately termed selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs). Recent progress in our understanding of the molecular biology of estrogen receptor (ER) action has provided a great deal of evidence which promises to increase our understanding of the mechanism through which SERMs elicit their tissue-specific effects. The identification of numerous coactivators and corepressors which modulate receptor function and the realization of two subtypes of ER attest to the potential complexity through which SERMs produce diverse tissue-specific responses. Evidence from co-crystal structures of ER ligand-binding domains complexed with SERMs provides additional information as to how this class of ligands can elicit diverse biologic responses. SERMs also influence the stability of the ER protein, and recent information on the determinants of receptor stability and the role of proteasome-mediated protein degradation in ER-driven transcription also promises to give a fuller understanding of SERM biology. These aspects of the molecular biology of estrogen receptor action may help clarify the mechanism(s) of SERM biologic action and will be addressed in further detail in this review.
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PMID:Molecular perspectives on selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs): progress in understanding their tissue-specific agonist and antagonist actions. 1172 17

Proteasome-mediated proteolysis modulates the cellular concentration of estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) and is induced by treatment of cells with 17beta-estradiol. Herein, we show that multiple receptor agonists, including 17alpha-estradiol and estriol as well as the antagonist ICI-182780, stimulate proteasome-dependent proteolysis of ERalpha in a process that requires ligand binding to the receptor. Proteolysis of receptor depends on ligand concentration, and there exists a direct correlation between ligand-binding affinity and the half-maximal dose of ligand required to stimulate receptor degradation. Furthermore, introduction of a point mutation into the receptor ligand-binding pocket yields a stable receptor resistant to proteolysis. Interestingly, although all ligands stimulate receptor degradation, the extent to which overall ER levels are affected varies with each ligand and is not related to ligand-binding affinity or activation of transcription. These results demonstrate ligand-specific regulation of ERalpha proteolysis, and they introduce the concept that cellular receptor concentration is governed not only at the level of induction of proteolysis but also by the efficiency with which the receptor is degraded.
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PMID:Ligand-specific regulation of proteasome-mediated proteolysis of estrogen receptor-alpha. 1188 9

The estrogen receptor (ER) is a hormone-dependent transcription factor that belongs to the steroid/thyroid hormone receptor superfamily. Since the ER contributes to development and progression in human breast cancer, a number of studies have explored ways to inactivate this receptor. Previous studies have suggested that the 90-kDa heat shock protein (Hsp90) interacts with the ER, thus stabilizing the receptor in an inactive state. Here, we report that radicicol, an Hsp90-specific inhibitor, repressed estrogen-dependent transactivation of the ER as measured by pS2 gene transcription and a reporter gene encoding an estrogen-responsive element. Furthermore, we showed that radicicol induced rapid degradation of ERalpha, while the amount of ubiquitinated ERalpha was increased. A proteasome inhibitor, LLnL, almost completely abrogated the radicicol-induced decrease in expression level, as well as in transcriptional activity of ERalpha. These results suggest that radicicol disrupts the ER-Hsp90 heterodimeric complex, thereby generating ERalpha that is susceptible to ubiquitin/proteasome-induced degradation.
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PMID:Radicicol represses the transcriptional function of the estrogen receptor by suppressing the stabilization of the receptor by heat shock protein 90. 1191 45


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