Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
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The orphan nuclear receptor pregnane X receptor (PXR) plays an important role in the detoxification of foreign and endogenous chemicals, including bile acids. PXR promotes bile acid elimination by activating bile acid-detoxifying enzymes and transporters. Certain bile acids are known to promote colonic carcinogenesis by inducing colon cancer cell apoptosis. However, whether and how PXR plays a role in colon cancer apoptosis has not been reported. In this study, we showed that activation of PXR by genetic (using a constitutively activated PXR) or pharmacological (using PXR agonist rifampicin) means protected the PXR-overexpressing colon cancer HCT116 cells from deoxycholic acid-induced apoptosis. Interestingly, activation of PXR also protected HCT116 cells from adriamycin-induced cell death, suggesting that the antiapoptotic effect of PXR was not bile acid specific. Moreover, the antiapoptotic effect of PXR in HCT116 cells appeared to be independent of xenobiotic enzyme regulation, because these cells had little basal and inducible expression of bile acid-detoxifying enzymes. Instead, SuperArray analysis showed that PXR-mediated deoxycholic acid resistance was associated with up-regulation of multiple antiapoptotic genes, including BAG3, BIRC2, and MCL-1, and down-regulation of proapoptotic genes, such as BAK1 and TP53/p53. Treatment with rifampicin in colon cancer LS180 cells, a cell line known to express endogenous PXR, also inhibited apoptosis. Activation of PXR in transgenic mice inhibited bile acid-induced colonic epithelial apoptosis and sensitized mice to dimethylhydrazine-induced colonic carcinogenesis, suggesting that the antiapoptotic effect of PXR is conserved in normal colon epithelium. In summary, our results have established the antiapoptotic role of PXR in both human colon cancer cells and normal mouse colon epithelium.
Mol Endocrinol 2008 Apr
PMID:The antiapoptotic role of pregnane X receptor in human colon cancer cells. 1809 95

Antagonizing the action of the human nuclear xenobiotic receptor pregnane X receptor (PXR) may have important clinical implications in preventing drug-drug interactions and improving therapeutic efficacy. We provide evidence that a naturally occurring phytoestrogen, coumestrol, is an antagonist of the nuclear receptor PXR (NR1I2). In transient transfection assays, coumestrol was able to suppress the agonist effects of SR12813 on human PXR activity. PXR activity was assessed and correlated with effects on the metabolism of the anesthetic tribromoethanol and on gene expression in primary human hepatocytes. We found that coumestrol was able to suppress the effects of PXR agonists on the expression of the known PXR target genes, CYP3A4 and CYP2B6, in primary human hepatocytes as well as inhibit metabolism of tribromoethanol in humanized PXR mice. Coumestrol at concentrations above 1.0 microm competed in scintillation proximity assays with a labeled PXR agonist for binding to the ligand-binding cavity. However, mammalian two-hybrid assays and transient transcription data using ligand-binding-cavity mutant forms of PXR show that coumestrol also antagonizes coregulator recruitment. This effect is likely by binding to a surface outside the ligand-binding pocket. Taken together, these data imply that there are antagonist binding site(s) for coumestrol on the surface of PXR. These studies provide the basis for development of novel small molecule inhibitors of PXR with the ultimate goal of clinical applications toward preventing drug-drug interactions.
Mol Endocrinol 2008 Apr
PMID:The phytoestrogen coumestrol is a naturally occurring antagonist of the human pregnane X receptor. 1809 94

Xenobiotic and drug metabolism and transport are managed by a large number of genes coordinately regulated by at least three nuclear receptors or xenosensors: aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), constitutive androstane receptor (CAR, NR1I3), and pregnane X receptor (PXR, NR1I2). Initially characterized as xenosensors, it is now evident that CAR and PXR also trigger pleiotropic effects on liver function. Recent studies have shown the existence of crosstalk between xenosensors and other nuclear receptors or transcription factors controlling endogenous signaling pathways which regulate physiological functions. This review is focused on recent observations showing that activation of CAR and PXR alters lipid metabolism, glucose homeostasis, and inflammation by interfering with HNF4alpha, FoxO1, FoxA2, PGC1alpha, or NFkB p65. Such crosstalks explain clinical observations and provide molecular mechanisms allowing understanding how xenobiotics and drugs may affect physiological functions and provoke endocrine disruptions.
Mol Pharm
PMID:Xenoreceptors CAR and PXR activation and consequences on lipid metabolism, glucose homeostasis, and inflammatory response. 1815 29

Activation of pregnane X receptor (PXR) and constitutive androstane receptor (CAR) by xenobiotic inducers of cytochromes P450 is part of a pleiotropic response that includes liver hypertrophy, tumor promotion, effects on lipid homeostasis, and energy metabolism. Here, we describe an acute response to CAR and PXR activators that is associated with induction of Insig-1, a protein with antilipogenic properties. We first observed that activation of CAR and PXR in mouse liver results in activation of Insig-1 along with reduced protein levels of the active form of sterol regulatory element binding protein 1 (Srebp-1). Studies in mice deficient in CAR and PXR revealed that the effect on triglycerides involves these two nuclear receptors. Finally, we identified a functional binding site for CAR and PXR in the Insig-1 gene by in vivo, in vitro, and in silico genomic analysis. Our experiments suggest that activation Insig-1 by drugs leads to reduced levels of active Srebp-1 and consequently to reduced target gene expression including the genes responsible for triglyceride synthesis. The reduction nuclear Srebp-1 by drugs is not observed when Insig-1 expression is repressed by small interfering RNA. In addition, observed that Insig-1 is also a target of AMP-activated kinase, the hepatic activity of which is increased by activators of CAR and PXR and is known to cause a reduction of triglycerides. The fact that drugs that serve as CAR or PXR ligands induce Insig-1 might have clinical consequences and explains alterations lipid levels after drug therapy.
Mol Pharmacol 2008 Apr
PMID:Regulatory cross-talk between drug metabolism and lipid homeostasis: constitutive androstane receptor and pregnane X receptor increase Insig-1 expression. 1818 84

There are a considerable number of reports identifying and characterizing genetic variants within the CYP2C9 coding region. Much less is known about polymorphic promoter sequences that also might contribute to interindividual differences in CYP2C9 expression. To address this problem, approximately 10,000 base pairs of CYP2C9 upstream information were resequenced using 24 DNA samples from the Coriell Polymorphism Discovery Resource. Thirty-one single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified; nine SNPs were novel, whereas 22 were reported previously. Using both sequencing and multiplex single-base extension, individual SNP frequencies were determined in 193 DNA samples obtained from unrelated, self-reported Hispanic Americans of Mexican descent, and they were compared with similar data obtained from a non-Latino white cohort. Significant interethnic differences were observed in several SNP frequencies, some of which seemed unique to the Hispanic population. Analysis using PHASE 2.1 inferred nine common (>1%) variant haplotypes, two of which included the g.3608C>T (R144C) CYP2C9(*)2 and two the g.42614A>C (I359L) CYP2C9(*)3 SNPs. Haplotype variants were introduced into a CYP2C9/luciferase reporter plasmid using site-directed mutagenesis, and the impact of the variants on promoter activity assessed by transient expression in HepG2 cells. Both constitutive and pregnane X receptor-mediated inducible activities were measured. Haplotypes 1B, 3A, and 3B each exhibited a 65% decrease in constitutive promoter activity relative to the reference haplotype. Haplotypes 1D and 3B exhibited a 50% decrease and a 40% increase in induced promoter activity, respectively. These data suggest that genetic variation within CYP2C9 regulatory sequences is likely to contribute to differences in CYP2C9 phenotype both within and among different populations.
Mol Pharmacol 2008 Jun
PMID:Novel CYP2C9 promoter variants and assessment of their impact on gene expression. 1831 Mar 3

Low nutritional calcium contributes to disruption of the intestinal epithelial barrier function, to hyperproliferation of colonocytes and increased occurrence of aggressive secondary bile acids in the gut lumen. These mechanisms are also known to be involved in the etiology of colonic inflammation and cancer. We studied in mice and human adenocarcinoma-derived Caco-2 cells the impact of low calcium on markers of inflammation (cyclooxygenase-2; COX-2), of detoxification (pregnane and xenobiotic receptor (PXR)/steroid and xenobiotic receptor (SXR), cytochrome P450 steroid-inducible 3a11 (CYP3A11)), and on expression of the vitamin D system as a protection against tumorigenesis. Caco-2 cells express high COX-2 and low SXR mRNA levels when subconfluent. During differentiation this is reversed, while low calcium enhanced COX-2 protein expression. In vivo low dietary calcium significantly increased the expression of the PXR target gene CYP3A11 in the proximal colon, suggesting compensatory defense mechanisms. In comparison with males, low nutritional calcium elicits a better protective response in females: both the vitamin D synthesizing 25-hydroxyvitamin D(3 )1alpha hydroxylase (CYP27B1) mRNA and the detoxifying CYP3A11 mRNA are augmented more. While it is recognized that colonic vitamin D synthesis may prevent tumor progression, low dietary calcium also elevates the 1,25-(OH)(2)-D(3) catabolic 25-hydroxyvitamin D(3) 24 hydroxylase (CYP24) expression primarily in the proximal colon. Our data suggest the proximal colon as the primary site of response to insufficient calcium intake.
Mol Nutr Food Res 2008 Jun
PMID:Nutritional calcium modulates colonic expression of vitamin D receptor and pregnane X receptor target genes. 1832 73

As a promiscuous xenobiotic sensor, the constitutive androstane receptor (CAR; NR1I3) regulates the expression of multiple drug-metabolizing enzymes and transporters in liver. The constitutively activated nature of CAR in the cell-based transfection assays has hindered its use as a predictor of metabolism-based drug-drug interactions. Here, we have identified 1-(2-chlorophenylmethylpropyl)-3-isoquinoline-carboxamide (PK11195), a typical peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBR) ligand, as a selective and potent inhibitor of human (h) CAR. In cell-based transfection assays, PK11195 inhibited the constitutive activity of hCAR more than 80% at the concentration of 10 microM, and the PK11195-inhibited activity was efficiently reactivated by the direct CAR activator, 6-(4-chlorophenyl)imidazo[2,1-b][1,3]thiazole-5-carbaldehyde-O-(3,4-dichlorobenzyl) oxime, but not by the indirect hCAR activator, phenobarbital. Mammalian two-hybrid and GST pull-down assays showed that PK11195 repressed the interactions of hCAR with the coactivators steroid receptor coactivator-1 and glucocorticoid receptor-interacting protein 1 to inhibit hCAR activity. The inhibition by PK11195 specifically occurred to the hCAR: PK1195 strongly activated human pregnane X receptor (PXR), whereas it did not alter the activity of the mouse CAR and mouse PXR. In addition, PBR played no role in the PK11195 inhibition of hCAR because the inhibition fully occurred in the HeLa cells in which the PBR was knocked down by small interfering RNA. In the Car(-/-) mouse liver, PK11195 translocated enhanced yellow fluorescent protein-hCAR into the nucleus. These results are consistent with the conclusion that PK11195 is a novel hCAR-specific antagonist that represses the CAR-coactivator interactions to inhibit the receptor activity inside the nucleus. Thus, PK11195 can be used as a chemical tool for studying the molecular basis of CAR function.
Mol Pharmacol 2008 Aug
PMID:The peripheral benzodiazepine receptor ligand 1-(2-chlorophenyl-methylpropyl)-3-isoquinoline-carboxamide is a novel antagonist of human constitutive androstane receptor. 1849 98

UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs) are critical to the detoxification of numerous drugs, environmental pollutants, and endogenous molecules. However, as yet not all of the human UGTs have been cloned and characterized. cDNA clones from the UGT2A3 gene (located on chromosome 4q13) were isolated using pooled human liver RNA. Approximately 10% of clones contained a c.1489A>G nucleotide substitution, yielding proteins with a residue 497 alanine (UGT2A3.2) instead of a threonine (UGT2A3.1). The allele frequency of this polymorphism (rs13128286) was 0.13 in a European-American population as determined by direct DNA sequencing. Of 81 structurally diverse glucuronidation substrates tested, UGT2A3 expressed by a baculovirus system selectively glucuronidated bile acids, particularly hyodeoxycholic acid at the 6-hydroxy position. Apparent K(m) values of UGT2A3.1 and UGT2A3.2 for hyodeoxycholic acid 6-glucuronidation were 69 +/- 7 and 44 +/- 12 microM, respectively. Of 29 different extrahepatic tissues evaluated by real-time polymerase chain reaction, UGT2A3 mRNA was most highly expressed in small intestine (160% of liver), colon (78% of liver), and adipose tissue (91% of liver). An in silico scan of the proximal UGT2A3 promoter/5'-regulatory region identified transcription factor consensus elements consistent with tissue-selective expression in liver (HNF1) and intestine (CXD2), as well as induction by rifampicin (pregnane X receptor). In LS180 human intestinal cells, rifampicin increased UGT2A3 mRNA by more than 4.5-fold compared with vehicle, whereas levels were not significantly affected by the arylhydrocarbon receptor ligand beta-naphthoflavone. This is the first report establishing UGT2A3 as a functional enzyme, and it represents significant progress toward the goal of having a complete set of recombinant human UGTs for comparative functional analyses.
Mol Pharmacol 2008 Sep
PMID:Novel polymorphic human UDP-glucuronosyltransferase 2A3: cloning, functional characterization of enzyme variants, comparative tissue expression, and gene induction. 1852 38

Very few antagonists have been identified for the human pregnane X receptor (PXR). These molecules may be of use for modulating the effects of therapeutic drugs, which are potent agonists for this receptor (e.g., some anticancer compounds and macrolide antibiotics), with subsequent effects on transcriptional regulation of xenobiotic metabolism and transporter genes. A recent novel pharmacophore for PXR antagonists was developed using three azoles and consisted of two hydrogen bond acceptor regions and two hydrophobic features. This pharmacophore also suggested an overall small binding site that was identified on the outer surface of the receptor at the AF-2 site and validated by docking studies. Using computational approaches to search libraries of known drugs or commercially available molecules is preferred over random screening. We have now described several new smaller antagonists of PXR discovered with the antagonist pharmacophore with in vitro activity in the low micromolar range [S-p-tolyl 3',5-dimethyl-3,5'-biisoxazole-4'-carbothioate (SPB03255) (IC(50), 6.3 microM) and 4-(3-chlorophenyl)-5-(2,4-dichlorobenzylthio)-4H-1,2,4-triazol-3-ol (SPB00574) (IC(50), 24.8 microM)]. We have also used our computational pharmacophore and docking tools to suggest that most of the known PXR antagonists, such as coumestrol and sulforaphane, could also interact on the outer surface of PXR at the AF-2 domain. The involvement of this domain was also suggested by further site-directed mutagenesis work. We have additionally described an FDA approved prodrug, leflunomide (IC(50), 6.8 microM), that seems to be a PXR antagonist in vitro. These observations are important for predicting whether further molecules may interact with PXR as antagonists in vivo with potential therapeutic applications.
Mol Pharmacol 2008 Sep
PMID:Computational discovery of novel low micromolar human pregnane X receptor antagonists. 1857 10

Hops extracts are used to alleviate menopausal symptoms and as an alternative to hormone replacement therapy, but they can produce potentially harmful drug-drug interactions. The nuclear xenobiotic receptor pregnane X receptor (PXR) is promiscuously activated by a range of structurally distinct chemicals. It has a key role in the transcriptional regulation of genes that encode xenobiotic metabolism enzymes. In this study, hops extracts are shown to induce the expression of numerous drug metabolism and excretion proteins. The beta-bitter acid colupulone is demonstrated to be a bioactive component and direct activator of human PXR. The 2.8-A resolution crystal structure of the ligand binding domain of human PXR in complex with colupulone was elucidated, and colupulone was observed to bind in a single orientation stabilized by both van der Waals and hydrogen bonding contacts. The crystal structure also indicates that related alpha- and beta-bitter acids have the capacity to serve as PXR agonists as well. Taken together, these results reveal the structural basis for drug-drug interactions mediated by colupulone and related constituents of hops extracts.
Mol Pharmacol 2008 Dec
PMID:Structural basis of human pregnane X receptor activation by the hops constituent colupulone. 1876 84


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