Nonbiased identification of DNA sequences that bind thyroid hormone receptor alpha 1 with high affinity.
Thyroid hormone receptors are transcription factors that bind to specific DNA sequences and regulate gene expression in a ligand-dependent manner. Although thyroid hormone receptors are known to bind to the hexamer 5'-AGGTCA, it is not known if this represents the optimal binding site. Therefore, a nonbiased strategy was used to identify DNA sequences which bind thyroid hormone receptor alpha 1 with high affinity. Such DNA sequences were isolated from a pool of random sequences using a strategy combining an electrophoretic mobility shift assay with the polymerase chain reaction. It was found that thyroid hormone receptor alpha 1 binds with highest affinity to the octamer 5'-TAAGGTCA. Mutation of the two 5'-nucleotides decreased the affinity of thyroid hormone receptor alpha 1 for this DNA sequence approximately 5-fold, and the importance of those nucleotides in receptor binding was confirmed by DNA footprinting. A single copy of the octamer sequence (but not the hexamer AGGTCA) could impart T3 responsiveness to a heterologous promoter in a transient transfection assay. The results indicate that the optimal binding site for thyroid hormone receptor alpha 1 is 2 base pairs larger than previously thought, and that a single binding site can function as a response element. In addition, we speculate that the optimal binding sites for thyroid hormone, vitamin D, and retinoic acid receptors may not be identical, as had previously been thought.[1]References
- Nonbiased identification of DNA sequences that bind thyroid hormone receptor alpha 1 with high affinity. Katz, R.W., Koenig, R.J. J. Biol. Chem. (1993) [Pubmed]
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