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The NR4A subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles

The nuclear hormone receptor (NR) superfamily includes the orphan NR4A subgroup, comprised of Nur77 (NR4A1), Nurr1 (NR4A2) and NOR-1 (NR4A3). These NRs are classified as early response genes, are induced by a diverse range of signals, including fatty acids, stress, growth factors, cytokines, peptide...

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Autores principales: Maxwell, Megan A., Muscat, George E.O.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Nuclear Receptor Signaling Atlas 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1402209/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16604165
http://dx.doi.org/10.1621/nrs.04002
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author Maxwell, Megan A.
Muscat, George E.O.
author_facet Maxwell, Megan A.
Muscat, George E.O.
author_sort Maxwell, Megan A.
collection PubMed
description The nuclear hormone receptor (NR) superfamily includes the orphan NR4A subgroup, comprised of Nur77 (NR4A1), Nurr1 (NR4A2) and NOR-1 (NR4A3). These NRs are classified as early response genes, are induced by a diverse range of signals, including fatty acids, stress, growth factors, cytokines, peptide hormones, phorbol esters, neurotransmitters, and physical stimuli (for example magnetic fields, shear stress). The ability to sense and rapidly respond to changes in the cellular environment thus appears to be a hallmark of this subfamily. The members of the NR4A subgroup are well conserved in the DNA binding domain (~91-95%) and the C-terminal ligand-binding domain (~60%), but are divergent in the N-terminal AB region. These receptors bind as monomers, homodimers and heterodimers with RXRs (to mediate retinoid signaling) to different permutations of the canonical NR binding motif. The NR4A subgroup activates gene expression in a constitutive ligand-independent manner. NR4A-mediated trans-activation (LBD) involves unusually active N-terminal AF-1 domains that mediate coactivator recruitment. Moreover, the NR4A receptors encode atypical LBDs and AF-2 domains. For example, the LBDs contain no cavity due to bulky hydrophobic residue side chains, and lack the classical coactivator-binding cleft constituted by helices 3, 4 and 12. However, a hydrophobic patch exists between helices 11 and 12, that encodes a novel cofactor interface that modulates transcriptional activity. In line with the pleiotropic physiological stimuli that induce the NR4A subgroup, these orphan NRs have been implicated in cell cycle regulation (and apoptosis), neurological disease, steroidogenesis, inflammation, carcinogenesis and atherogenesis.
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spelling pubmed-14022092006-04-06 The NR4A subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles Maxwell, Megan A. Muscat, George E.O. Nucl Recept Signal Review The nuclear hormone receptor (NR) superfamily includes the orphan NR4A subgroup, comprised of Nur77 (NR4A1), Nurr1 (NR4A2) and NOR-1 (NR4A3). These NRs are classified as early response genes, are induced by a diverse range of signals, including fatty acids, stress, growth factors, cytokines, peptide hormones, phorbol esters, neurotransmitters, and physical stimuli (for example magnetic fields, shear stress). The ability to sense and rapidly respond to changes in the cellular environment thus appears to be a hallmark of this subfamily. The members of the NR4A subgroup are well conserved in the DNA binding domain (~91-95%) and the C-terminal ligand-binding domain (~60%), but are divergent in the N-terminal AB region. These receptors bind as monomers, homodimers and heterodimers with RXRs (to mediate retinoid signaling) to different permutations of the canonical NR binding motif. The NR4A subgroup activates gene expression in a constitutive ligand-independent manner. NR4A-mediated trans-activation (LBD) involves unusually active N-terminal AF-1 domains that mediate coactivator recruitment. Moreover, the NR4A receptors encode atypical LBDs and AF-2 domains. For example, the LBDs contain no cavity due to bulky hydrophobic residue side chains, and lack the classical coactivator-binding cleft constituted by helices 3, 4 and 12. However, a hydrophobic patch exists between helices 11 and 12, that encodes a novel cofactor interface that modulates transcriptional activity. In line with the pleiotropic physiological stimuli that induce the NR4A subgroup, these orphan NRs have been implicated in cell cycle regulation (and apoptosis), neurological disease, steroidogenesis, inflammation, carcinogenesis and atherogenesis. The Nuclear Receptor Signaling Atlas 2006-02-08 /pmc/articles/PMC1402209/ /pubmed/16604165 http://dx.doi.org/10.1621/nrs.04002 Text en Copyright © 2006, Maxwell and Muscat. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Non-Commercial Attribution License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Maxwell, Megan A.
Muscat, George E.O.
The NR4A subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles
title The NR4A subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles
title_full The NR4A subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles
title_fullStr The NR4A subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles
title_full_unstemmed The NR4A subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles
title_short The NR4A subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles
title_sort nr4a subgroup: immediate early response genes with pleiotropic physiological roles
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1402209/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16604165
http://dx.doi.org/10.1621/nrs.04002
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