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Glucocorticoid- and progesterone-specific effects are determined by differential expression of the respective hormone receptors

Abstract

ALTHOUGH glucocorticoids and progestins control vastly different physiological processes, the receptors mediating the effects of these hormones interact with the same DNA sequences1–4. Transfer experiments involving synthetic genes5 and in vitro binding studies6 have shown that progesterone and glucocorticoid receptors both recognize the same 15-base pair DNA element (TGTACAGGATGTTCT), raising the question of how the two steroids affect gene expression selectively. We considered the possibility that their selectivity arises from either the differential expression of the receptors in target cells or the differential dependence of receptor function on additional transcription factors. To test these alternatives we introduced a progesterone-receptor expression pi asm id into the rat hepatoma cell line Fto2B-3 which contains glucocorticoid receptor but is devoid of progesterone receptor. We report that expression of the progesterone receptor in Fto2B-3 cells renders endogenous glucocorticoid-regulated genes inducible by progestins. Our data show that the responsive-ness of a cell to external stimuli can be reprogrammed by the expression of a single transcription factor and that differential expression of hormone receptors is at least one mechanism by which steroid-specific gene activation is achieved.

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Strähle, U., Boshart, M., Klock, G. et al. Glucocorticoid- and progesterone-specific effects are determined by differential expression of the respective hormone receptors. Nature 339, 629–632 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1038/339629a0

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