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J Biol Chem, Vol. 274, Issue 52, 37131-37138, December 24, 1999
Transcriptional Anti-repression
THYROID HORMONE RECEPTOR -2 RECRUITS SMRT COREPRESSOR BUT
INTERFERES WITH SUBSEQUENT ASSEMBLY OF A FUNCTIONAL COREPRESSOR
COMPLEX*
Zhihong
Yang ,
Suk-Hyun
Hong, and
Martin L.
Privalsky§
From the Section of Microbiology, Division of Biological Sciences,
University of California, Davis, California 95616
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ABSTRACT |
Thyroid hormone receptors (T3Rs) are
hormone-regulated transcription factors. Different T3R isoforms are
expressed in a tissue-specific and developmentally regulated manner.
The T3R -1, -0, and -1 isoforms typically repress target gene
expression in the absence of hormone and activate transcription in the
presence of hormone. Intriguingly, however, the T3R -2 isoform fails
to repress, and instead is able to activate transcription in both the
absence and presence of hormone. We investigated the molecular
mechanism behind this absence of repression by T3R -2. Repression by
T3R -1, -0, and -1 is mediated by the ability of these isoforms
to physically recruit a SMRT/N-CoR corepressor complex. We determined
that the unliganded T3R -2 also recruits the SMRT corepressor; in
contrast to the -1, -0, and -1 isoforms, however, the T3R -2
protein interacts not only with the C-terminal "receptor-interaction
domain" of SMRT, but also makes additional contacts with the
N-terminal "silencing domain" of the SMRT corepressor. These
additional, T3R -2-specific contacts interfere with the subsequent
association of SMRT with mSin3, a crucial second subunit of the
corepressor holo-complex. Our results suggest that T3R -2 regulates
transcription through a novel anti-repression mechanism, recruiting
SMRT, but preventing the subsequent formation of a functional
corepressor complex.
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INTRODUCTION |
Many key aspects of vertebrate physiology, reproduction, and
development are regulated through the actions of small, lipophilic hormones. These hormones include the steroids, retinoids, and thyroid
hormones, and mediate their effects through the actions of a
corresponding family of nuclear hormone receptors (1-7). The nuclear
receptors function as hormone-regulated transcription factors, binding
to specific DNA sequences, denoted hormone response elements, and
regulating the transcription of adjacent target genes (1-7).
Reflecting this common mode of action, nuclear hormone receptors also
share a common structural architecture composed of a central DNA
binding domain and a C-terminal hormone binding domain, flanked in turn
by more divergent N-terminal and "hinge" regions (Fig. 1). Embedded
within this global domain structure are additional amino acid motifs
responsible for receptor nuclear localization, for transcription
regulation, and for interactions of the receptor with a variety of
accessory and modulatory proteins (1-7).
Notably, many nuclear hormone receptors are expressed from more than
one locus, and/or are subject to alternative mRNA splicing so as to
generate a series of distinct, although interrelated receptor
"isoforms." Thyroid hormone receptors
(T3Rs),1 for example, are
encoded by two distinct loci, denoted and , and each locus can
in turn be expressed as alternatively spliced isoforms, -1 and
-2, or -0 (in birds), -1, and -2 (Fig.
1). Different receptor isoforms are
synthesized in a developmentally regulated and cell-specific manner;
T3R -2 expression, for example, is restricted principally to the
pituitary, hypothalamus, and a few other tissues, whereas the T3R -1
and T3R -0/1 isoforms are more broadly expressed (8-14). The
specific expression patterns and evolutionary conservation of these
multiple isoforms, together with the results of gene ablation
experiments, strongly suggest that distinct isoforms perform
physiologically distinct functions (1-7).

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Fig. 1.
Schematic representations of the different
isoforms of thyroid hormone receptor and of the SMRT and mSin3
corepressor proteins. A, schematic representations of
the different T3R isoforms are depicted from N to C terminus. The
locations of the DNA binding (DNA) and hormone binding
(HORMONE BINDING) domains are illustrated and,
for the T3R -2 isoform, are defined relative to their positions in
the amino acid sequence. Differences in the amino acid sequences of the
different isoforms are depicted by alterations in shading.
B, schematic representations of the SMRT and mSin3A
corepressor proteins are depicted from N to C terminus. The positions
of the SMRT domains involved in transcriptional silencing
(SILENCING DOMAIN) and of the C-terminal SMRT
domains representing the principal sites of interaction with nuclear
hormone receptors (RECEPTOR INTERACTION) are
shown relative to the amino acid sequence. Both the silencing and
receptor interaction domains have been further dissected into two
subdomains each, as indicated (25, 27, 35, 37). The locations of
presumed paired-amphipathic helices within the mSin3A polypeptide are
numbered 1 to 4.
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Many nuclear hormone receptors have bimodal transcriptional properties,
and can either repress or activate expression of a given target gene
depending on the hormone status, nature of the promoter, and the cell
context. Particularly well characterized is the ability of the
T3R -1, -0, and -1 isoforms to repress transcription of many of
their target genes in the absence of hormone, and to activate
transcription of these same target genes in the presence of hormone
(see, e.g., Refs. 15-21). These bipolar regulatory
properties are closely linked to the ability of these receptors to
recruit accessory proteins, denoted corepressors and coactivators, that
help mediate the actual transcriptional response (reviewed in Ref. 22).
The molecular mechanisms by which corepressors and coactivators
modulate transcription remain to be fully elucidated but appear to
involve, at least in part, modifications of the chromatin template
(reviewed in Refs. 23 and 24). Thus, in the absence of hormone T3Rs
physically bind to corepressor polypeptides denoted SMRT and N-CoR
(25-29); SMRT and N-CoR recruit, in turn, a larger protein complex
containing mSin3 and histone deacetylase that, by hypoacetylating
chromatin, is believed to restrict accessibility of the DNA template to
the transcriptional machinery (30-36). Conversely, binding of cognate hormone leads to a conformational change in the T3R that releases the
corepressor complex, and recruits instead coactivator complexes, many
of which possess histone acetyltransferase activity (16, 17, 20, 22,
25-27, 37-39); histone acetylation is believed to create a more
accessible, and therefore more readily transcribed, chromatin structure
(22-24).
Different receptor isoforms can display distinct functions. For
example, in contrast to the bipolar regulatory properties of the
T3R -1, -0, and -1 isoforms described above, the T3R -2 isoform does not repress, and can even activate, certain promoters in
the absence of hormone; addition of thyroid hormone simply further
enhances this hormone-independent activation (21, 40). We wished to
better understand why the unliganded T3R -2 isoform fails to repress
transcription. We report here that T3R -1, T3R -0, T3R -1, and
T3R -2 all strongly interact with the SMRT corepressor in the absence
of hormone; the T3R- 2 isoform, however, makes additional contacts
with domains of the SMRT corepressor that are not contacted by the
T3R -1, T3R -0, or T3R -1 forms. These additional T3R -2
contacts overlap the silencing domains of the SMRT polypeptide and
inhibit the ability of the SMRT protein to recruit the mSin3 subunit of
the corepressor complex. Conversely, disruption of this inhibitory
interaction of the T3R -2 N terminus with the SMRT silencing domain,
using any of a variety of experimental modalities, converts the
unliganded T3R -2 into a transcriptional repressor, analogous in its
properties to those of the T3R , -0, or -1 isoforms. Our
results therefore suggest a novel "anti-repression" model in which
the T3R -2 receptor recruits SMRT, but prevents SMRT-mediated
repression by preventing assembly of a functional corepressor complex.
This model of anti-repression may extend to other members of the
nuclear hormone receptor family, or to other families of
transcriptional repressors that also mediate their actions through the
SMRT/N-CoR corepressor complex.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
Protein-Protein Binding Assays in Vitro--
Glutathione
S-transferase (GST) fusions were constructed by using a
pGEX-KG vector and inserting target DNA representing full-length TFIIB,
codons 1-214 of mSin3A, codons 404-545 of mSin3A, codons 1-101 of
T3R -1, codons 1-107 of T3R -2, or various domains of SMRT (35,
41, 42). The recombinant plasmids were transformed into
Escherichia coli strain DH5 , and the resulting GST fusion proteins were purified and immobilized by binding to
glutathione-conjugated agarose beads (41).
[35S]Methionine-radiolabeled proteins were synthesized by
employing pSG5-, pCMV-, or pVZ-based plasmids in a coupled in
vitro transcription/translation (TnT) system (Promega). The
35S-labeled proteins were subsequently incubated with 25 µl of the GST protein-agarose matrix for 2 h at 4 °C in 300 µl of HEMG buffer (40 mM HEPES (pH 7.8), 50 mM KCl, 0.2 mM EDTA, 5 mM
MgCl2, 0.1% Triton X-100, 10% glycerol, 1.5 mM dithiothreitol, 1× Complete Proteinase Inhibitor (Roche
Molecular Biochemicals), and 10 mg/ml bovine serum albumin) (27, 35,
42, 43). The agarose matrix was then washed four times with 500 µl
each of HEMG buffer lacking proteinase inhibitors and bovine serum
albumin. Radiolabeled proteins remaining bound to the matrix were
eluted with 10 mM free glutathione and were resolved by
sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE)
(27, 35, 42, 43). The electrophoretograms were visualized and
quantified by PhosphorImager analysis (Molecular Dynamics Storm System).
For competition experiments codons 1-101 of T3R -1, codons 1-107 of
T3R -2, or codons 404-545 of mSin3A were inserted into pMAL-c2. The
plasmids were introduced into E. coli DH5 and the resulting maltose-binding protein (MBP) fusion polypeptides were induced and were purified using the manufacturer's protocol (New England Biolabs).
Co-immunoprecipitation Assay--
COS-1 cells were transfected
by a LipofectAMINE Plus (Life Technologies, Inc.) methodology.
Approximately 2.5 × 105 cells were transfected with
750 ng of a pCR-SMRT plasmid and a pSG5-GAL4AD-HA plasmid containing no
insert, codons 1-101 of T3R -1, or codons 1-107 of T3R -2. The
transfected cells were incubated for 36 h and harvested into lysis
buffer (1× phosphate-buffered saline, 1 mM EDTA, 1.5 mg/ml
iodoacetamide, 0.5% Triton X-100, 0.2 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and Complete Protease Inhibitor (Roche
Molecular Biochemicals)). The cell lysates were clarified by
centrifugation, incubated with anti-HA-directed antibody (Santa Cruz
Biotechnology) for 1 h at 4 °C, 20 µl of protein A-Sepharose was added to each sample, and the incubation was continued for 1 h. The immune complex was collected by centrifugation, extensively washed in lysis buffer, and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting, using a rabbit polyclonal antibody directed against the SMRT C-terminal domain.
Construction of Mutants of T3R -2--
NotI site
substitution mutants of T3R -2 were constructed by a polymerase chain
reaction protocol using standard recombinant DNA techniques (44).
Oligonucleotides were devised to substitute four native codons, spaced
every 10 amino acids within the T3R -2 N terminus, with a GCT GCG GCC
GCT sequence, representing the introduction of four alanines and a
novel NotI restriction site. Subsequent NotI
cleavage and ligation permitted the generation of defined deletions
between any two of the alanine substitution mutations. Creation of the
Y61F/Y65F double substitution mutation within the T3R -2 N terminus
was through an analogous oligonucleotide-directed, polymerase chain
reaction technique (44).
Transient Transfections--
Transfections of CV-1 cells were
performed by a liposome/Lipofectin methodology (Life Technologies,
Inc.). Approximately 5 × 104 cells were transfected
with 20 ng of a pSG5-T3R , pSG5-T3R -0, pSG5-T3R -1, or
pSG5-T3R -2 plasmid, 50 ng of pCH110 as an internal control, and 100 ng of a pTK-DR4-luciferase reporter (43, 44). For certain experiments,
a pSG5-mSin3A expression vector was also incorporated. Additional pUC18
plasmid was used to normalize the total DNA to 500 ng/transfection. The
cells were placed into either hormone-depleted medium, or medium
containing 100 nM T3-thyronine and incubated at 37 °C
for 48 h. The cells were subsequently harvested, and the
luciferase activity was determined relative to -galactosidase activity (42-44).
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RESULTS |
The T3R -2 Isoform Does Not Repress Target Gene Expression in the
Absence of Hormone--
It has been reported that the neither the
avian nor the mammalian -2 isoform of T3R represses target gene
expression, but instead either has no effect on target gene
transcription in the absence of hormone, or displays a
hormone-independent transcriptional activation that is further enhanced
on addition of hormone (21, 40). To confirm this phenomenon, we
employed transient transfections of CV-1 cells to examine the ability
of the different T3R isoforms to modulate expression of a suitable
T3R-responsive luciferase reporter gene. CV-1 cells contain little or
no endogenous T3Rs, and exhibited little or no hormone regulation of
luciferase expression when this reporter construct was introduced alone
(Fig. 2). As expected from prior work
(21), introduction of the T3R -1, -0, or -1 isoforms led to
repression of reporter gene expression in the absence of hormone (Fig.
2, A and B). In clear contrast, however,
introduction of the T3R -2 isoform did not repress reporter gene
expression in the absence of hormone; instead, the unliganded T3R -2
either had no effect on luciferase expression or had a slight
stimulatory activity when compared with the basal levels of reporter
expression observed in the absence of an introduced receptor (Fig. 2
and data not shown). Also as expected, addition of hormone led to
stimulation of reporter gene expression by all the T3R isoforms tested
(Fig. 2B and data not shown). Our results confirm that the
T3R -2 isoform exhibits unique transcriptional regulatory properties,
and in contrast to other T3R isoforms, fails to repress transcription
in the unliganded state.

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Fig. 2.
Lack of repression by
T3R -2. A, T3R -2 fails to
repress in the absence of hormone. Either an empty pSG5 vector
(vector) or a pSG5 vector expressing one of the T3R
isoforms, as indicated below the panel, was introduced into CV-1 cells
together with a thymidine kinase promoter-luciferase reporter
containing a DR-4 thyroid hormone response element; a pCH110
lacZ plasmid was also included as an internal control. The
cells were incubated in thyroid hormone-depleted medium for 48 h,
harvested, and the luciferase activity was determined relative to the
-galactosidase activity. The data represent the average and standard
deviation of from three to eight experiments. B, T3R -2
activates in the presence of hormone. A similar experiment as in
panel A was performed but either in the absence
(solid fill) or presence (diagonal
fill) of 100 nM T3-thyronine hormone. A
horizontal line is drawn to permit comparison to
the basal activity of the reporter (i.e. relative luciferase
activity in the absence of a transfected T3R).
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T3R -2 Interacts with SMRT Corepressor, but Makes Novel Contacts
with the SMRT Silencing Domain Not Observed for T3R -1, T3R -0, or
T3R -1--
We wished to determine the molecular basis for the
failure of the T3R -2 isoform to repress gene transcription. We first
tested if the T3R -2 isoform was able to interact with the SMRT
corepressor, given that the recruitment of SMRT is crucial for
repression by the other T3R isoforms (25-29, 45). We initially
employed a "GST-pull-down" methodology. GST fusions, representing
different domains of SMRT, were immobilized by binding to glutathione
agarose. The various immobilized SMRT derivatives were then incubated
with the radiolabeled T3R, and the T3R protein bound to the SMRT matrix
was subsequently eluted, detected by SDS-PAGE, and quantified by
PhosphorImager analysis (Fig. 3).

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Fig. 3.
Binding of different isoforms of T3R to
different domains of SMRT. Each T3R isoform, indicated to the
left of the panels, was synthesized as a full-length
radiolabeled protein by in vitro transcription and
translation and was tested for the ability to bind to different
GST-SMRT fusion constructs, immobilized on glutathione-agarose.
Non-recombinant GST was employed as a negative control (top
panel). Radiolabeled receptor that bound to each GST
construct in the absence (solid fill) or presence
(diagonal fill) of 100 nM T3
thyronine hormone was subsequently eluted, was resolved by SDS-PAGE,
and was quantified by PhosphorImager analysis. The results of a
representative experiment are presented. Note the change in scale
between the top three panels and the bottom
panel.
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Although unable to repress in vivo, the T3R -2 isoform
nonetheless interacted strongly with the C terminus of SMRT (codons 1086-1495) (Fig. 3); this region of SMRT has previously been
identified as the principal site of interaction of corepressor with the
nuclear hormone receptors (Fig. 1). The SMRT/T3R -2 interaction was
comparable in intensity to those observed between SMRT and T3R -1,
T3R -0, or T3R -1 (Fig. 3). Also in common with these other
isoforms, the interaction of the T3R -2 with the SMRT (codons
1055-1495) domain was inhibited by the addition of thyroid hormone
(Fig. 3; compare solid to diagonal
fill bars). None of the T3R isoforms tested
interacted with a non-recombinant GST construct employed as a negative
control, or with a GST fusion representing an internal domain (codons
751-1074) of SMRT (Fig. 3). Intriguingly, however, the T3R -2
isoform did bind to a domain within the N-terminal domain of SMRT that
was not contacted by the other T3R isoforms. This novel,
T3R -2-specific contact mapped to amino acids 566-680 of SMRT (Fig.
3) and overlaps a region in the N terminus of SMRT crucial for
SMRT-mediated transcriptional silencing (Fig. 1).
The Novel SMRT Contacts Observed for T3R -2 Are Mediated by the
Unique N Terminus of This Receptor Isoform--
It would appear likely
that the ability of T3R -2, but not -0 or -1, to interact with
the SMRT silencing domain reflects the divergent nature of the N
termini of the different isoforms, given that the DNA-binding and
hormone-binding domains of these isoforms are identical (Fig. 1).
Notably, the N terminus of T3R -0 is highly truncated relative to
that of -2 (Fig. 1), suggesting that the T3R -2 N terminus might
serve to stabilize the interaction with the SMRT silencing domain,
rather than the N terminus of the other isoforms acting to inhibit this
interaction. Supporting this conclusion, an artificially truncated
T3R 2 product, lacking an N-terminal domain (Fig.
4, denoted T3R 2-t), failed to bind to
the SMRT (codons 566-680) silencing domain, whereas the full-length T3R -2 translation product, employed in the same assay, did bind to
the SMRT silencing domain (Fig. 4). As expected, both the full-length and truncated T3R 2 forms bound to the SMRT C-terminal (codons 1086-1495) domain (Fig. 4); this interaction is mediated by the C-terminal receptor domain that is retained in both T3R -2 and T3R 2-t.

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Fig. 4.
Differential SMRT binding by full-length
versus artificially truncated
T3R -2. The in vitro
translation system was employed to produce both full-length receptor
(T3R 2) and an internally initiated truncated derivative (T3R 2-t;
Ref. 46) lacking the native N terminus (note 10% input lane). The
ability of the full-length and truncated receptor derivatives to bind
to non-recombinant GST, or to the various GST-SMRT fusions was
determined by the protocol described in Fig. 3. A reproduction of the
resulting PhosphorImager scan is depicted above, and a quantification
of the results, expressed as the percentage of radiolabeled receptor
bound to each GST fusion relative to the amount of the same polypeptide
in the original input, is presented below. A representative experiment
is presented.
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Is the T3R -2 N terminus alone sufficient for this interaction with
the SMRT silencing domain? Consistent with this proposal, radiolabeled
constructs limited to either the first 70 or first 107 amino acids of
T3R -2 were able to bind to the GST-SMRT silencing domain, but not to
a non-recombinant GST construct employed as a negative control (Fig.
5). The T3R -2 N terminus also
exhibited a weaker interaction with the C terminus of SMRT, but not
with GST alone or with an internally derived SMRT domain (Fig. 5). In
contrast, the N terminus of the -1 T3R isoform did not interact with
any region of SMRT (Fig. 5). The ability of the N terminus of T3R -2,
but not of T3R -1, to interact strongly with SMRT was also observed
in a reciprocal experiment using SMRT as the radiolabeled protein and
GST fusions representing the T3R N termini (Fig.
6A); a construct representing
the N-terminal silencing domains of SMRT was sufficient for this
interaction (Fig. 6B). The ability of the T3R -2 N
terminus to interact with SMRT extended further to co-transfection
experiments in mammalian cells; immunoprecipitation of an HA-tagged
construct representing the T3R -2 N terminus efficiently co-precipitated the SMRT protein from lysates of transfected COS-1 cells, whereas an HA-tagged T3R -1 N terminus construct did not (Fig.
6C). We conclude that the receptor N terminus mediates the contacts that the T3R -2 isoform makes with the SMRT silencing domain, whereas the N termini of the other T3R isoforms do not interact with SMRT.

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Fig. 5.
Binding of the abstracted N terminus of
T3R -2 to the SMRT corepressor. The same
type of in vitro binding experiment as in Fig. 3 was
repeated, but employing radiolabeled receptor derivatives restricted to
the N-terminal domain of each T3R isoform. The receptor derivatives
tested included: amino acids 1-107 of T3R -2, amino acids 1-70 of
T3R -2, or amino acids 1-101 of T3R -1, as indicated to the left
of the panels. The radiolabeled protein bound to each GST-fusion was
eluted, was resolved by SDS-PAGE, and was visualized by
PhosphorImager analysis. Quantification of protein binding,
relative to input, was as in Fig. 4.
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Fig. 6.
Binding of radiolabeled SMRT and N-CoR
proteins to the T3R -2 N terminus.
A, the similar experiment as in Fig. 5 was repeated but in a
reciprocal fashion, assaying the ability of full-length radiolabeled
SMRT or N-CoR corepressor proteins to bind to GST fusions representing
the N-terminal domain of T3R -1 (amino acids 1-101) or T3R 2
(amino acids 1-107), as indicated above the panel. Non-recombinant GST
was employed as a negative control. The radiolabeled corepressor
proteins bound to each GST-fusion were eluted, resolved by SDS-PAGE,
and visualized by PhosphorImager analysis. Adjacent lanes represent
duplicate experiments. Quantification of protein binding, relative to
input, was as in Fig. 4. B, the experiment in
panel A was repeated, except using in
vitro translation products restricted to the N-terminal silencing
domains of SMRT (amino acids 1-680) or N-CoR (amino acids 1-2129,
plus six C-terminal amino acids retained as a result of the
construction), as indicated. C, an expression vector, either
empty ( ) or containing the N termini of T3R -1 or -2 linked to
an HA-epitope tag as indicated above the panel,
were introduced by transfection into COS-1 cells, together with a SMRT
expression vector. The cells were subsequently lysed, the lysates were
immunoprecipitated using anti-HA antibodies, and the immunoprecipitates
were analyzed by a Western blot method using anti-SMRT antibodies
(upper panel). A Western blot analysis of the
total lysates, using anti-SMRT antibodies, is presented below.
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We next extended these experiments to N-CoR; N-CoR is a second
corepressor polypeptide that is related to SMRT both structurally and
functionally (26, 28). The T3R -2 N terminus interacted with
full-length N-CoR in a similar fashion as it interacted with SMRT,
i.e. radiolabeled N-CoR bound in vitro to GST
fusions representing the T3R -2 N terminus, but not to GST fusions
representing the T3R -1 N terminus, or to non-recombinant GST used as
a negative control (Fig. 6A). As with SMRT, the N-terminal
"silencing region" of N-CoR was sufficient for this interaction
with the T3R -2 N terminus (Fig. 6B).
The Interaction of T3R -2 with the SMRT Silencing Domain Inhibits
the Ability of SMRT to Recruit mSin3A--
An important component of
SMRT repression is mediated through the ability of the SMRT silencing
domain to physically interact with mSin3, which in turn helps tether
the histone deacetylases and additional corepressor components that
serve as the actual effectors of transcriptional silencing (reviewed in
Refs. 23 and 24). Might the interaction of the T3R -2 N terminus with the SMRT silencing domain interfere with these downstream aspects of
SMRT-mediated repression? We first tested if the T3R- 2 N terminus inhibited the ability of SMRT to recruit the mSin3 corepressor subunit.
The primary in vitro interaction site between SMRT and mSin3A overlaps the PAH-3 domain of the latter (Fig. 1); as previously reported, radiolabeled SMRT was strongly bound by a GST-mSin3A construct representing this mSin3A domain, but not by a non-recombinant GST construct or by other mSin3A domains employed as negative controls
(Fig. 7A and Ref. 35).
Notably, addition of increasing amounts of the N-terminal domain of
T3R -2, synthesized as a MBP fusion, strongly inhibited this
interaction between SMRT and mSin3A (Fig. 7A,
solid fill); in fact, the MBP-T3R -2 N terminus
polypeptide more effectively interfered with the mSin3A/SMRT
interaction than did a MBP-mSin3A polypeptide used in a homologous
competition (Fig. 7A). In contrast, equivalent amounts of
the non-recombinant MBP or an MBP fused to the N terminus of T3R -1
had no effect on the SMRT/mSin3A interaction (Fig. 7A).

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Fig. 7.
Inhibition of mSin3A binding to SMRT and
N-CoR by the T3R -2 N-terminal domain.
A, the binding of mSin3A to SMRT is inhibited by the
T3R -2 N-terminal domain. Radiolabeled SMRT, synthesized in
vitro, was incubated with a GST-mSin3A (codons 404-545) fusion
protein immobilized on glutathione agarose. Included in the incubation
was 0 (none), 10, 100, or 1000 ng of a MBP fusion polypeptide
containing the N-terminal 107 amino acids of T3R -2 (T3R -2), a
non-recombinant MBP polypeptide (MBP-only), a MBP fusion polypeptide
containing the N-terminal 101 amino acids of T3R -1, or a MBP-mSin3A
(amino acids 404-545) construct, as indicated. Radiolabeled SMRT bound
to the GST-mSin3A was subsequently eluted, resolved by SDS-PAGE, and
quantified by PhosphorImager analysis. The background binding of SMRT
to a non-recombinant GST matrix was subtracted from each value
presented. B, the binding of mSin3A to N-CoR is inhibited by
the T3R -2 N-terminal domain. A similar experiment as in
panel A was performed, but employing radiolabeled
N-CoR and a mSin3A (codons 1-215) construct. C, the binding
of SMRT to TFIIB is not inhibited by the T3R -2 N-terminal domain. A
similar experiment as in panel A was performed,
but employing radiolabeled TFIIB together with the GST-SMRT (amino
acids 95-680) construct.
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A analogous inhibitory effect of the T3R -2 N terminus, but not that
of -1 or of MBP alone, was observed in reciprocal experiments using
radiolabeled full-length mSin3A and a GST-SMRT construct (data not
shown). Consistent with the inhibition being mediated by a direct
interaction between the T3R -2 N terminus and the SMRT silencing
domain, inhibition of the SMRT/mSin3A interaction by the T3R -2 N
terminus was not observed with deleted versions of SMRT that are unable
to bind to the T3R -2 N terminus (data not shown).
The SMRT-related N-CoR corepressor displays interactions with two
regions of mSin3A in vitro: the PAH-3 domain interaction also observed for SMRT, and an additional interaction with the mSin3A
N-terminal PAH-1 domain (Fig. 1). We therefore tested the effect of the
T3R -2 N terminus on the ability of N-CoR to tether mSin3A. The
T3R -2 N terminus strongly interfered with the ability of N-CoR to
interact with the PAH-1 domain (Fig. 7B) and somewhat more
modestly with the ability of N-CoR to interact with the PAH-3 (data not
shown). Neither the T3R -1 N terminus nor the MBP-alone constructs
demonstrated this interference (Fig. 7B).
Although the ability of SMRT to recruit mSin3 plays an important role
in repression, inhibitory interactions of SMRT with the general
transcriptional machinery, including TFIIB, may also contribute to
transcriptional silencing under certain conditions (35, 47). This
SMRT/TFIIB interaction is mediated by the same silencing region of SMRT
as implicated in the mSin3 interaction (35). We therefore next examined
if the T3R -2 N terminus also interferes with the SMRT/TFIIB
interaction. Radiolabeled TFIIB bound readily to a GST-SMRT construct
under our GST-pull down conditions (Fig. 7C and Ref. 35). In
contrast to our results with mSin3A, co-introduction of the T3R -2 N
terminus had no demonstrable effect on the SMRT/TFIIB interaction (Fig.
7C). We conclude that the effects of the T3R -2 N terminus
are specific, in that the -2 N terminus interferes with the ability
of SMRT to recruit mSin3, but not TFIIB.
Disruption of the Ability of T3R -2 to Interact with the SMRT
Silencing Region Converts T3R -2 into a Transcriptional
Repressor--
Our results suggest that the N terminus of T3R -2
competes with mSin3A for occupancy of the SMRT silencing domain. If so, then overexpression of mSin3A in transfected cells might outcompete the
effects of the -2 N terminus and confer on T3R -2 the ability to
repress transcription. Consistent with this hypothesis, the introduction of increasing amounts of an mSin3A expression vector into
CV-1 cells led to conversion of the unliganded T3R -2 from an
activator to a strong repressor of reporter gene transcription (Fig.
8A). In contrast,
overexpression of mSin3A had little or no effect on the repression
observed for the unliganded T3R -0 or T3R -1 isoforms (Fig.
8A). Similar results were observed with a different reporter
based on the "negative response element" in the TSH- promoter;
overexpression of mSin3A interfered with reporter activation in the
absence of hormone by T3R -2, but not by -0 (data not shown).

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|
Fig. 8.
Effects of disrupting the interaction of the
T3R -2 N terminus with SMRT. A,
overexpression of mSin3A converts unliganded T3R -2 into a repressor.
The transfection experiment in Fig. 2A was repeated, except
introducing different quantities of a pSG-5 mSin3A expression vector,
as indicated below the panel. The average and range of two experiments
are presented. B, deletions in the receptor N terminus
inhibit binding of SMRT by T3R -2. A series of in-frame deletions
were created in the N terminus of T3R -2; the codons encompassed by
each deletion are indicated below the panel. Each
mutant receptor, synthesized by in vitro transcription and
translation, was tested for the ability to bind to a GST-SMRT(aino
acids 566-680) fusion protein as in Fig. 3. Binding of wild-type
T3R -2 was defined as 100. The average and range of duplicate
experiments are presented. C, deletions in the receptor N
terminus convert T3R -2 into a repressor. The T3R -2 mutants
described in panel B were tested for the ability
to repress reporter gene transcription in the absence of hormone, as in
Fig. 2. Results are presented for the various T3R -2 deletions and
the wild-type T3R -2, as indicated below the
panel. Parallel transfections using an empty vector or
wild-type T3 -0 are included for comparison. The average and standard
deviation of multiple experiments are shown.
|
|
To approach the same question by genetic means, we mapped the SMRT
interaction domain within the N terminus of T3R -2 by creating a
series of deletion mutations within the receptor. We first examined the
effect of these mutations on the ability of the encoded protein to bind
to the SMRT silencing domain (Fig. 8B); a (6-60) or
(6-70) deletion abolished virtually all interaction of the receptor
with the SMRT silencing domain (Fig. 8B). We next employed
transient transfections to establish if mutations that interfered with
the T3R -2/SMRT silencing domain interaction also altered the
transcriptional properties of the receptor. Notably, the T3R -2
N-terminal deletions that severely inhibited the interaction with the
SMRT silencing domain in vitro, i.e. (6-60)
or (6-70), also converted the -2 isoform into a repressor in the
absence of hormone, resulting in a phenotype indistinguishable from
that observed with the wild-type T3R , -0, and -1 isoforms
(Fig. 8C). We conclude that there is a close correspondence
between the ability of the T3R -2 N terminus to contact the silencing
domain of SMRT and the absence of repression by T3R -2.
A short region in the N terminus of T3R -2, centered on tyrosines 61 and 65, can act as a transcriptional activator when abstracted from the
receptor and fused to a GAL4-DNA binding domain; the integrity of these
tyrosines, in particular, is crucial for this transcriptional
activation function (21). We therefore examined if these two tyrosines
contributed to the SMRT interaction/anti-repression phenomenon we
report here. In contrast to their contribution to transcriptional
activation in the GAL4DBD fusion, conversion of these tyrosines to
phenylalanines had no observable effect either on the ability of the
-2 receptor to interact with SMRT in vitro or on the
absence of transcriptional repression by T3R -2 in transient transfections (Table I). We conclude
that, although mapping to an overlapping region, the lack of repression
observed for the T3R -2 isoform can be distinguished from the
transcriptional activation domain previously mapped to this region of
the receptor.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table I
Comparison of SMRT binding and transcriptional repression properties of
wild-type and mutant T3R -2 proteins
Binding to the SMRT (codons 566-680) domain was determined by a GST
"pull-down" protocol as in Fig. 3. Transcriptional repression was
determined by transient transfections, as in Fig. 2. -Fold repression
is defined as the relative luciferase activity observed with the empty
pSG5 vector, divided by the relative luciferase activity observed in
the presence of the T3R allele indicated; values below 1.0 represent
activation.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The T3R -2 Isoform Recruits SMRT Corepressor, but Makes
Additional Corepressor Contacts Not Mediated by the Other T3R
Isoforms--
The T3R -1, -0, and -1 isoforms can repress
transcription in the absence of hormone, reflecting the ability of
these receptors to recruit a SMRT/N-CoR corepressor complex to the
target gene promoter (23-29, 48, 49). The goal of the experiments
reported here was to determine why the T3R -2 isoform, in contrast to
these other T3R isoforms, does not repress transcription (21). The simplest hypothesis, that the T3R -2 isoform is unable to recruit the
SMRT corepressor, proved not to be true. On the contrary, T3R -2
bound to SMRT with the same or greater overall avidity as did the
T3R -1, -0, and -1 isoforms. Also in common with these other
isoforms, the primary T3R -2 interaction with SMRT was hormone-labile
and was mediated by contacts between the receptor hormone binding
domain and an interaction domain previously identified within the C
terminus of SMRT. However, the T3R -2 isoform made additional strong
contacts with the N-terminal region of SMRT that were not observed for
the T3R isoforms that are able to confer repression.
These novel contacts of T3R -2 with SMRT were mediated by the
N-terminal domain of the receptor, a region that, although highly conserved between the avian and mammalian T3R -2 isoforms, diverges extensively in sequence from the N termini of T3R -1, -0, and -1 (3, 8, 50). This novel SMRT interaction domain of T3R -2 mapped
to a region spanning the first 60-70 amino acids of this receptor.
Sequence analysis failed to elucidate any identifiable amino acid motif
within this N-terminal domain, nor was the sequence of the -2 N
terminus recapitulated in any other protein currently in the data
base.2 There was also no
detectable sequence relatedness between the SMRT interaction domain
within the T3R -2 N terminus and the previously identified SMRT
interaction domains located in the C-terminal domains of the nuclear
hormone receptors. We conclude that the N terminus of the T3R -2
isoform possesses a novel SMRT interaction motif that is not found in
receptors that are capable of mediating repression.
The N Terminus of T3R -2 Interacts with a Region of SMRT
Essential for Transcriptional Repression and Can Interfere with
Assembly of a Corepressor Complex--
Two adjacent domains within
SMRT, denoted silencing domain (SD)-1 and SD-2, play important roles in
corepressor-mediated transcriptional repression (25-27, 31, 33, 35,
45). Mutations in either of these silencing domains impair the ability
of SMRT to function as a corepressor and deletion of both SD-1 and SD-2
results in virtually all loss of SMRT-mediated transcriptional
repression (25-27, 31, 33, 35, 45). SD-1 is known to participate in at
least two interactions that are believed to contribute to the silencing
phenotype. The first, and more extensively characterized, is the
ability of SD-1 to bind to mSin3, which in turn recruits histone
deacetylase and other critical components of the corepressor complex
(31, 33, 35, 45). The ability to assemble this SMRT/mSin3/HDAC complex
is closely linked to the ability of SMRT to repress, and abridging the
assembly or actions of this complex can impair or prevent
transcriptional repression (31, 33, 35, 45). It was therefore
provocative that the site of interaction of the T3R -2 N terminus on
SMRT overlaps the SD-2 region, and maps close to the SD-1 region. Might
the T3R -2 N terminus be able to inhibit SMRT function by blocking
the actions of these SMRT silencing domains? In fact, introduction of
the T3R -2 N terminus strongly interferes with the ability of SMRT to
recruit the mSin3 polypeptide in vitro. A similar phenomenon
is also observed with N-CoR. In contrast, introduction of the T3R -1
N terminus, or of other non-receptor proteins, has no effect on the
SMRT/mSin3 or N-CoR/mSin3 interaction.
In addition to recruitment of mSin3, the SMRT SD-1 domain is also able
to interact with TFIIB. Although less well characterized than the mSin3
interaction, this and other interactions with the general
transcriptional machinery may also contribute to SMRT-mediated silencing, at least in certain contexts, by interfering with assembly of the transcriptional preinitiation complex (35, 47). This interaction
of SMRT with TFIIB may contribute to transcriptional repression by
functioning in conjunction with the mSin3/HDAC complex, or conceivably
may mediate aspects of SMRT repression in contexts where the mSin3/HDAC
complex is inoperative. Although the T3R -2 N terminus inhibited the
ability of the SMRT SD-1 to recruit mSin3, it did not detectably
inhibit the ability of the same SMRT SD-1 to interact with TFIIB. These
results raise the intriguing possibility that SMRT tethered to T3R -2
may still be able to interact with, and repress the function of, TFIIB.
Therefore, T3R -2 may potentially be capable of repression in certain
promoter or cell contexts where the SMRT-TFIIB interaction, rather than
the SMRT/mSin3/HDAC interaction, plays the predominant role.
We Propose an Anti-repression Model for the T3R -2 Isoform, by
Which This Receptor Tethers, but Prevents the Function of, the SMRT
Corepressor Complex--
In summary, we suggest that the unliganded
T3R -2 fails to repress transcription not due to a failure of this
isoform to recruit SMRT, but due to the ability of the T3R -2 N
terminus to make additional, inhibitory contacts with the silencing
domain of SMRT. These inhibitory contacts are proposed to block, in all
or in part, the proper association of SMRT with mSin3, and thereby
abort the formation of a functional corepressor complex. Consistent with this hypothesis, interfering with the ability of the T3R -2 N
terminus to interact with the SMRT silencing domain converts the
unliganded T3R -2 into a transcriptional repressor. For example, overexpression of mSin3A in transfected cells converts the unliganded T3R -2 from a modest transcriptional activator into a strong
repressor, presumably by competing with the T3R -2 N terminus for
SMRT occupancy. In contrast, mSin3A overexpression has no effect on T3R
isoforms with N termini that fail to interact with SMRT and that
already function as repressors. Similarly, N-terminal mutations that
disrupt the ability of the T3R -2 to interact with the SMRT silencing domain also convert the T3R -2 phenotype to that of T3R , -0, or
-1: repression in the absence, and activation in the presence, of hormone.
It should be noted that the unliganded T3R -2 protein not only fails
to repress, but can actually stimulate target gene expression in
certain contexts, and ligand-independent activation functions have been
previously mapped within the N terminus of the T3R -2 isoform (21,
51). Our own experiments demonstrate that these hormone-independent
activation domains exist, but are distinct in their location and/or
their properties from the anti-repression domains we report here. In
particular, tyrosine 61 and 65, previously identified as required for
transcriptional activation by the T3R -2 N terminus (21), neither
played a role in the SMRT interaction described here nor were necessary
for anti-repression. Similarly, a second activation function within the
T3R -2 N terminus, important in regulation of negative response
elements, maps to amino acids 89-116 and therefore lies outside of the
anti-repression determinants analyzed here
(51).3 Perhaps the
anti-repression properties of the T3R -2 N terminus contribute to
receptor physiology by permitting these hormone-independent activation
functions to be manifested by the unliganded T3R -2 despite the
concomitant presence of the tethered SMRT protein. Therefore, we
suggest that the unique transcriptional properties of the T3R -2
isoform are actually a sum of the combined functions of the
anti-repression, hormone-independent activation, and
hormone-dependent activation domains of the receptor; the
combinatorial outcome of these distinct functions may be different in
different cell types and on different target promoters.
Our anti-repression model is consistent with previous reports
establishing a role for the T3R -2 N terminus in the unique transcriptional properties of this isoform (51). Furthermore, by
proposing that corepressor tethered to T3R -2 is rendered
functionally inert by the -2 N terminus, our work helps explain the
previous, and apparently paradoxical observation that N-CoR corepressor physically associates with T3R -2, but does not detectably influence the transcriptional properties of this isoform (40). It is also of note
that T3R -2 exhibits unique regulatory properties on "negative" hormone response elements, a distinct subclass of DNA binding sites
that are turned off, rather than on, by hormone (40, 52). It will be
interesting to determine if the contributions of the T3R -2/SMRT
interactions described here also influence these negative thyroid
response elements.
The T3R -2 isoform exhibits a highly tissue-specific expression
pattern and possesses unique regulatory properties (21, 40, 51, 52). It
appears that the lack of repression observed for this isoform, mediated
in part by the anti-repression model proposed here, reflects the unique
physiological role of this isoform. The anti-repression model also
suggests a possible mechanism by which other transcription factors that
operate through the SMRT corepressor complex may conceivably modulate
their own transcriptional silencing properties. The PLZF and BCL-6
transcriptional repressors, for example, all display multiple points of
contact with SMRT/N-CoR that include interactions with the SMRT
silencing domain (see, e.g, Refs. 43 and 53). More work will
be necessary to establish if anti-repression plays a role in the
functions of these non-receptor transcription factors, and in the
actions of other members of the nuclear hormone receptor family.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
We sincerely thank R. M. Evans and B. Vennstrom for providing the mammalian and avian T3R molecular clones
adapted for use in this research, C. Glass and M. G. Rosenfeld for
providing the N-CoR molecular clone, and M. A. Lazar for providing
the GAL4 expression and reporter vectors.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
This work was supported in part by Public Health
Services/National Institutes of Health Grants R37 CA-53394 and R01
DK-53528.The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article
must therefore be hereby marked
"advertisement" in
accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Supported in part by a University of California-Davis
biotechnology fellowship.
§
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 530-752-3013;
Fax: 530-752-9014; E-mail: mlprivalsky@ucdavis.edu.
2
Z. Yang, S.-H. Hong, and M. L. Privalsky,
unpublished observations.
3
Z. Yang, unpublished observations.
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
The abbreviations used are:
T3R, thyroid hormone
receptor;
GST, glutathione S-transferase;
SD, silencing
domain;
MBP, maltose-binding protein;
HA, hemagglutinin;
PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis;
TFIIB, transcription factor
IIB.
 |
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