Lysine-Cysteine-Serine-Tryptophan Inserted into the DNA-Binding Domain of Human Mineralocorticoid Receptor Increases Transcriptional Activation by Aldosterone
Yoshinao Katsu, Jiawen Zhang, Michael E. Baker

TL;DR
This study investigates how specific amino acid insertions in the DNA-binding domain of the human mineralocorticoid receptor affect its transcriptional activation by aldosterone, revealing increased activation linked to these modifications.
Contribution
It demonstrates that insertion of KCSW in the DBD enhances aldosterone-induced transcriptional activation of the human MR in a promoter-dependent manner.
Findings
KCSW insertion increases MR activation by aldosterone by about 50%.
Activation response varies with different promoters.
Mutations at codons 180 and 241 influence transcriptional activity.
Abstract
Due to alternative splicing in an ancestral DNA-binding domain (DBD) of the mineralocorticoid receptor (MR), humans contain two almost identical MR transcripts with either 984 amino acids (MR-984) or 988 amino acids (MR-988), in which their DBDs differ by only four amino acids, Lys,Cys,Ser,Trp (KCSW). Human MRs also contain mutations at two sites, codons 180 and 241, in the amino terminal domain (NTD). Together, there are five distinct full-length human MR genes in GenBank. Human MR-984, which was cloned in 1987, has been extensively studied. Human MR-988, cloned in 1995, contains KCSW in its DBD. Neither this human MR-988 nor the other human MR-988 genes have been studied for their response to aldosterone and other corticosteroids. Here, we report that transcriptional activation of human MR-988 by aldosterone is increased by about 50% compared to activation of human MR-984 in HEK293…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHormonal Regulation and Hypertension
