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Structural Biology of Multi-Domain Nuclear Receptor Complexes

$382,688R01FY2017GMNIH

Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, La Jolla CA

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Lipophilic molecules including steroid hormones, retinoids, fatty acids, and dietary lipids control reproductive, developmental and metabolic processes by directly binding and modulating the activities of nuclear receptors (NRs). NRs bind to DNA and regulate the expression of gene programs that lead to physiological responses to their small-molecule ligands. Structural studies over the past few decades have focused primarily on just the ligand binding domains (LBDs) or DNA-binding domains (DBDs) of NRs, but were unable to reveal how the multi-domain architectures are integrated in a quaternary structure. To understand the physical and functional coupling of different receptor domains, we have been conducting X-ray diffraction studies involving full-length and multi-domain nuclear receptor complexes in their functionally revealing complexes bound to DNA, ligands, and coregulator peptides. Our previous studies revealed that DBDs and LBDs of the PPAR?-RXR? heterodimer and HNF-4? homodimer are physically linked through a highly interfaced arrangement of domain surfaces, some of which are DNA-dependent. We now propose to considerably broaden our understanding of the domain-domain connections and allosteric communications in the nuclear receptor family. We will obtain the crystal structures of three new NR complexes that include the Retinoic-Acid Receptor (RAR) heterodimer with Retinoid X Receptor (RXR), the progesterone receptor (PR) homodimer, and the monomeric Rev-Erb? receptor. These differing NRs also discern distinct response elements consisting of direct repeats, inverted repeats, and single half-sites, thus, distinctive domain-domain interfaces are anticipated as compared to previously seen in PPAR?-RXR? or HNF-4?. We further propose to conduct a series of complementary biochemical and cell-based functional studies to probe and quantitate the mechanistic underpinning of inter- domain allosteric signal propagation in these receptor complexes.

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