1 research outputs found
Ligand-Regulated Heterodimerization of Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor α with Liver X Receptor α
Peroxisome proliferator-activated
receptor α (PPARα)
and liver X receptor α (LXRα) are members of the nuclear
receptor superfamily that function to regulate lipid metabolism. Complex
interactions between the LXRα and PPARα pathways exist,
including competition for the same heterodimeric partner, retinoid
X receptor α (RXRα). Although data have suggested that
PPARα and LXRα may interact directly, the role of endogenous
ligands in such interactions has not been investigated. Using <i>in vitro</i> protein–protein binding assays, circular
dichroism, and co-immunoprecipitation of endogenous proteins, we established
that full-length human PPARα and LXRα interact with high
affinity, resulting in altered protein conformations. We demonstrated
for the first time that the affinity of this interaction and the resulting
conformational changes could be altered by endogenous PPARα
ligands, namely long chain fatty acids (LCFA) or their coenzyme A
thioesters. This heterodimer pair was capable of binding to PPARα
and LXRα response elements (PPRE and LXRE, respectively), albeit
with an affinity lower than that of the respective heterodimers formed
with RXRα. LCFA had little effect on binding to the PPRE but
suppressed binding to the LXRE. Ectopic expression of PPARα
and LXRα in mammalian cells yielded an increased level of PPRE
transactivation compared to overexpression of PPARα alone and
was largely unaffected by LCFA. Overexpression of both receptors also
resulted in transactivation from an LXRE, with decreased levels compared
to that of LXRα overexpression alone, and LCFA suppressed transactivation
from the LXRE. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that
ligand binding regulates heterodimer choice and downstream gene regulation
by these nuclear receptors