8th Feb - Nuclear Receptors Flashcards
When were steroids first utilised as a drug?
1950s
When were steroid receptors identified?
1960s
Why are nuclear receptors easy to study?
As they can be switched on by adding hormones
What are the two types of nuclear receptor?
Steroid receptors - unliganded in cytoplasm and sequestered by HSP90
RAR, TR, VDR etc receptors - unliganded receptors in the nucleus, often sitting on the target gene acting as a repressor. The stimuli can be intracellular or extracellular.
Which region of the nuclear receptor shows high homology?
DBD
How were the functional domains of a nuclear receptor identified?
Through creating chimeric receptors by switiching the domains of two receptors: glucocorticoid and oestrogen. This showed which domain was the DBD and which was the LBD as the chimeric receptors either responded to oestrogen and activated the glucocorticoid receptors or vice versa
Outline the common domain organisation of an NR
Transactivation domain 1
DBD
NLS
Transactivation domain 2
Which two NRs have no DBD and why?
DAX and SHP, as they modulate the activity of other receptors
Why does every NR have 9 conserved cysteine residues?
To co-ordinate the zinc in the zinc finger region
Outline the hormone response element
Palindromic in nature with 3 bases between each half site
Give an example of a homodimeric NR
Oestrogen receptor
Human PS2
Give an example of a heterodimeric NR
TR
RAR
Where did NRs first appear?
In metazoans
How many NRs are encoded in the human genome?
48
What is the classification of NRs
Class 1 - Steroid Receptors
Class 2 -Heterodimers with RXR
Class 3- Orphan and monomeric receptors