2 research outputs found

    cAMP Enhances Estrogen-Related Receptor Ī± (ERRĪ±) Transcriptional Activity at the SP-A Promoter by Increasing Its Interaction with Protein Kinase A and Steroid Receptor Coactivator 2 (SRC-2)

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    Estrogen-related receptor (ERRĪ±) plays a critical role in basal and cAMP-induced expression of the human surfactant protein-A (SP-A) gene in lung type II cells through direct binding to an ERR response element (ERRE, 5ā€²-TGACCTTA-3ā€²) within its 5ā€²-flanking region. Furthermore, protein kinase A (PKA) up-regulates ERRĪ± activation of the hSP-A promoter. In the present study, using cultured human fetal lung type II cells, we observed that cAMP enhanced ERRĪ± phosphorylation and nuclear expression levels. cAMP/PKA stimulation of ERRĪ± activation of the SP-A promoter was blocked by the PKA inhibitor, H89, whereas the MAPK P38 inhibitor, SB203580, and the MAPK kinase inhibitor, PD98059, had negligible to modest effects. This suggests that cAMP acts selectively through PKA to increase ERRĪ± transcriptional activity. Of several coactivators tested, steroid receptor coactivator 2 (SRC-2) had the most pronounced effect to increase ERRĪ± transcriptional activity at the SP-A promoter; this was enhanced by cotransfection with PKA catalytic subunit (PKAcat). Interestingly, SRC-2, ERRĪ±, and PKAcat in type II cell nuclear extracts interacted at the ERRE; this was enhanced by cAMP and inhibited by H89. cAMP increased in vivo binding of PKAcat and SRC-2 to the ERRE genomic region in lung type II cells. In mutagenesis studies, three serines (S87, S114, and S277) were found to be critical for PKA and SRC-2 induction of ERRĪ± transcriptional activity. Collectively, these findings indicate that cAMP/PKA signaling enhances ERRĪ± phosphorylation and nuclear localization, recruitment to the SP-A promoter, and interaction with PKAcat and SRC-2, resulting in the up-regulation of SP-A gene transcription
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