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Coregulators Reside within Drosophila Ecdysone-Inducible Loci before and after Ecdysone Treatment

Ecdysone signaling in Drosophila remains a popular model for investigating the mechanisms of steroid action in eukaryotes. The ecdysone receptor EcR can effectively bind ecdysone-response elements with or without the presence of a hormone. For years, EcR enhancers were thought to respond to ecdysone...

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Autores principales: Krasnov, Aleksey N., Evdokimova, Aleksandra A., Mazina, Marina Yu, Erokhin, Maksim, Chetverina, Darya, Vorobyeva, Nadezhda E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10380596/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37511602
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241411844
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author Krasnov, Aleksey N.
Evdokimova, Aleksandra A.
Mazina, Marina Yu
Erokhin, Maksim
Chetverina, Darya
Vorobyeva, Nadezhda E.
author_facet Krasnov, Aleksey N.
Evdokimova, Aleksandra A.
Mazina, Marina Yu
Erokhin, Maksim
Chetverina, Darya
Vorobyeva, Nadezhda E.
author_sort Krasnov, Aleksey N.
collection PubMed
description Ecdysone signaling in Drosophila remains a popular model for investigating the mechanisms of steroid action in eukaryotes. The ecdysone receptor EcR can effectively bind ecdysone-response elements with or without the presence of a hormone. For years, EcR enhancers were thought to respond to ecdysone via recruiting coactivator complexes, which replace corepressors and stimulate transcription. However, the exact mechanism of transcription activation by ecdysone remains unclear. Here, we present experimental data on 11 various coregulators at ecdysone-responsive loci of Drosophila S2 cells. We describe the regulatory elements where coregulators reside within these loci and assess changes in their binding levels following 20-hydroxyecdysone treatment. In the current study, we detected the presence of some coregulators at the TSSs (active and inactive) and boundaries marked with CP190 rather than enhancers of the ecdysone-responsive loci where EcR binds. We observed minor changes in the coregulators’ binding level. Most were present at inducible loci before and after 20-hydroxyecdysone treatment. Our findings suggest that: (1) coregulators can activate a particular TSS operating from some distal region (which could be an enhancer, boundary regulatory region, or inactive TSS); (2) coregulators are not recruited after 20-hydroxyecdysone treatment to the responsive loci; rather, their functional activity changes (shown as an increase in H3K27 acetylation marks generated by CBP/p300/Nejire acetyltransferase). Taken together, our findings imply that the 20-hydroxyecdysone signal enhances the functional activity of coregulators rather than promoting their binding to regulatory regions during the ecdysone response.
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spelling pubmed-103805962023-07-29 Coregulators Reside within Drosophila Ecdysone-Inducible Loci before and after Ecdysone Treatment Krasnov, Aleksey N. Evdokimova, Aleksandra A. Mazina, Marina Yu Erokhin, Maksim Chetverina, Darya Vorobyeva, Nadezhda E. Int J Mol Sci Article Ecdysone signaling in Drosophila remains a popular model for investigating the mechanisms of steroid action in eukaryotes. The ecdysone receptor EcR can effectively bind ecdysone-response elements with or without the presence of a hormone. For years, EcR enhancers were thought to respond to ecdysone via recruiting coactivator complexes, which replace corepressors and stimulate transcription. However, the exact mechanism of transcription activation by ecdysone remains unclear. Here, we present experimental data on 11 various coregulators at ecdysone-responsive loci of Drosophila S2 cells. We describe the regulatory elements where coregulators reside within these loci and assess changes in their binding levels following 20-hydroxyecdysone treatment. In the current study, we detected the presence of some coregulators at the TSSs (active and inactive) and boundaries marked with CP190 rather than enhancers of the ecdysone-responsive loci where EcR binds. We observed minor changes in the coregulators’ binding level. Most were present at inducible loci before and after 20-hydroxyecdysone treatment. Our findings suggest that: (1) coregulators can activate a particular TSS operating from some distal region (which could be an enhancer, boundary regulatory region, or inactive TSS); (2) coregulators are not recruited after 20-hydroxyecdysone treatment to the responsive loci; rather, their functional activity changes (shown as an increase in H3K27 acetylation marks generated by CBP/p300/Nejire acetyltransferase). Taken together, our findings imply that the 20-hydroxyecdysone signal enhances the functional activity of coregulators rather than promoting their binding to regulatory regions during the ecdysone response. MDPI 2023-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10380596/ /pubmed/37511602 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241411844 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Krasnov, Aleksey N.
Evdokimova, Aleksandra A.
Mazina, Marina Yu
Erokhin, Maksim
Chetverina, Darya
Vorobyeva, Nadezhda E.
Coregulators Reside within Drosophila Ecdysone-Inducible Loci before and after Ecdysone Treatment
title Coregulators Reside within Drosophila Ecdysone-Inducible Loci before and after Ecdysone Treatment
title_full Coregulators Reside within Drosophila Ecdysone-Inducible Loci before and after Ecdysone Treatment
title_fullStr Coregulators Reside within Drosophila Ecdysone-Inducible Loci before and after Ecdysone Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Coregulators Reside within Drosophila Ecdysone-Inducible Loci before and after Ecdysone Treatment
title_short Coregulators Reside within Drosophila Ecdysone-Inducible Loci before and after Ecdysone Treatment
title_sort coregulators reside within drosophila ecdysone-inducible loci before and after ecdysone treatment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10380596/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37511602
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241411844
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