Characterization of a low affinity thyroid hormone receptor binding site within the rat GLUT4 gene promoter

CJ Torrance, SJ Usala, JE Pessin, GL Dohm�- Endocrinology, 1997 - academic.oup.com
CJ Torrance, SJ Usala, JE Pessin, GL Dohm
Endocrinology, 1997academic.oup.com
Previous studies have demonstrated that thyroid hormone (T3) stimulates insulin-responsive
glucose transporter (GLUT4) transcription and protein expression in rat skeletal muscle. The
aim of the present study was to define a putative thyroid hormone response element (TRE)
within the rat GLUT4 promoter and thus perhaps determine whether T3 acts directly to
augment skeletal muscle GLUT4 transcription. To this end, electrophoretic mobility shift
analyses were performed to analyze thyroid hormone receptor (TR) binding to a previously�…
Abstract
Previous studies have demonstrated that thyroid hormone (T3) stimulates insulin-responsive glucose transporter (GLUT4) transcription and protein expression in rat skeletal muscle. The aim of the present study was to define a putative thyroid hormone response element (TRE) within the rat GLUT4 promoter and thus perhaps determine whether T3 acts directly to augment skeletal muscle GLUT4 transcription. To this end, electrophoretic mobility shift analyses were performed to analyze thyroid hormone receptor (TR) binding to a previously characterized 281-bp T3-responsive region of the rat GLUT4 promoter. Indeed, within this region, a TR-binding site of the standard DR+4 TRE variety was located between bases −457/−426 and was shown to posses a specific affinity for in vitro translated TRs. Interestingly, however, the GLUT4 TR-binding site demonstrated a significantly lower affinity compared to a consensus DR+4 TRE, and only bound TRs appreciatively in the form of high affinity heterodimers, in this case with the cis-retinoic acid receptor.
In conclusion, these data demonstrated the presence of a specific TR-binding site within a T3-responsive region of the rat GLUT4 promoter and thus support the supposition that thyroid hormone acts directly to stimulate GLUT4 transcription in rat skeletal muscle. Moreover, characterization of a novel TR-binding site with low affinity suggests an additional mechanism by which the intrinsic activity and responsiveness of thyroid hormone regulated genes may be modulated.
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