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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 

Estrogen-modulated estrogen receptor x Pit-1 protein complex formation and prolactin gene activation require novel protein synthesis.

Both estrogen receptor (ER) and Pit-1 proteins are essential for the estrogen- activated expression of the rat prolactin gene. Our results show that ER.Pit-1 protein complex formation is reduced by estrogen in GH3 and PR1 rat pituitary tumor cells. In the latter, this decrease was blocked by cycloheximide, a protein synthesis inhibitor. On the other hand, the direct addition of estrogen to PR1 cell lysates had no effect on the formation of ER.Pit-1 complexes. Estrogen-activated prolactin gene expression was also inhibited by cycloheximide, suggesting that some form of protein synthesis is involved in ER.Pit-1 complex formation and subsequent prolactin gene activation. In support of this notion, we showed that estrogen-induced regulation of ER.Pit-1 complex formation could be transferred from cell lysates prepared from estrogen-treated PR1 cells to control cell lysates. This is not true for GH3 cells; instead, direct administration of estrogen to GH3 cell lysates readily abolished ER.Pit-1 protein complex formation in a dose-dependent manner, and such estrogen-induced regulation was blocked by the antiestrogen ICI 182,780. These findings thus indicate that 1) interaction between ER and Pit-1 proteins is estrogen-regulated in ways specific to different cell types, and 2) auxiliary protein factor synthesis may be involved in this process.[1]

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