Endocrinology Vol. 142, No. 6 2194-2199
Copyright © 2001 by The Endocrine Society
Perspective: Female Steroid Hormone Action
Orla M. Conneely, Ph.D.
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, Texas 77030
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Orla M. Conneely, Ph.D., Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030. E-mail:
orlac{at}bcm.tmc.edu
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Introduction
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The steroid hormones estrogen (E) and progesterone
(P) play a central role in the regulation of all aspects of female
reproductive activity leading to the establishment and maintenance of
pregnancy. Together, they act at the level of the hypothalamus,
pituitary, ovary, and uterus to coordinate cyclic neuroendocrine
gonadotropin production, ovulatory activity, and uterine development in
preparation for implantation of fertilized embryos. Both hormones are
also essential for postnatal mammary gland development regulating
postpubertal mammary ductal morphogenesis in the case of E and
pregnancy-associated lateral ductal branching and lobular alveolar
differentiation in the case of P. The diverse physiological activities
of E and P, however, are not restricted to the female reproductive
system. Estrogen is essential for male fertility, and both hormones
have been implicated in the cardiovascular, immune, and central nervous
systems and in bone function. In particular, estrogen has been shown to
play an important role in protection against osteoporosis in
postmenopausal women (1), in the prevention of coronary
heart disease (2) and in the maintenance of cognitive
function (3).
In addition to positive effects in both reproductive and
nonreproductive organs, estrogen plays an important role in the
development of uterine cancers, and both hormones have been implicated
in the development of breast cancer (4, 5, 6). The critical
role of estrogen in development of breast cancer is evidenced by the
significant protective response observed in women after treatment with
the antiestrogen, 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen (4-OHT) resulting in a 25%
decrease in mortality and 45% decrease in incidence (6, 7).
The conflict between positive and negative activities of these hormones
has fueled a search for selective receptor modulators (SRMS) for use in
hormone replacement therapy that possess the capability of harnessing
the tissue selective beneficial effects of the steroids while lacking
adverse activities in breast and uterus.
The effects of E and P are mediated through interaction with specific
intracellular receptors that are members of the nuclear receptor
superfamily of transcription factors (8). Binding of the
steroids to their cognate receptors induces conformational changes in
receptor structure leading to receptor dimerization, posttranslational
modification, and binding to specific enhancer DNA elements in the
promoters of specific genes and recruitment of coregulator proteins
that interact with general transcriptional machinery to elaborate
hormone-triggered changes in promoter activity. In general, agonist
ligands of receptors promote binding of coactivator proteins that
promote transcription initiation while binding of antagonists promote
interaction with corepressor proteins that facilitate transcription
repression (9). Recent advances in our understanding of
the molecular mechanisms of action of estrogen and progesterone
receptors, together with molecular genetic approaches to examine the
physiological consequences of receptor and coregulator protein
ablation, have provided important insights into how physiological
diversity of female steroid hormone action is achieved. Emerging from
these studies is the general principle that the modular nature of
receptors allows ligand, tissue and promoter specific interaction with
select subsets of coregulators capable of elaborating distinct
transcriptional and hence physiological responses to steroid
signal.
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Generation of functional diversity through modular receptor
proteins and distinct receptor subtypes
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E and P responsive tissues are initially determined by the tissue
distribution of receptor proteins whose restricted spatiotemporal
expression identifies tissues targeted for hormonal response. However,
tissues that express receptors for estrogen and progesterone exhibit
physiologically diverse responses to the same steroidal ligand.
Functional diversity arises from the existence of two structurally
related but nonidentical receptors for each hormone and by the ability
of a single receptor subtype to elicit diverse transcriptional
responses to a specific ligand. Molecular dissection of the structural
and functional relationships of steroid receptors and of the mechanisms
by which they interact with ligand, DNA, and the transcriptional
apparatus has provided valuable information on the molecular pathways
by which steroid receptors can generate functionally diverse
transcriptional responses to their cognate steroid ligand. Steroid
receptors including those for estrogen and progesterone have a modular
protein structure consisting of distinct functional domains capable of
binding steroidal ligand, dimerization of liganded receptors,
interaction with hormone-responsive DNA elements, and interaction with
coregulator proteins required for bridging receptors to the
transcriptional apparatus (8, 9). Binding of estrogen and
progestin agonists to their receptors induces conformational changes in
receptor structure that promote interaction of coactivator proteins
with distinct activation domains (AFs) located within both the amino
and carboxy terminal regions of the receptor. Such coactivators promote
chromatin remodeling and bridging with general transcription factors
resulting in the formation of productive transcription initiation
complexes at the receptor responsive promoter. In contrast, binding of
receptor antagonist compounds induces receptor conformational changes
that render AFs nonpermissive to coactivator binding and instead
promote interaction with corepressor proteins that inhibit
transcriptional activity of the receptor. The ability of steroid
receptors to interact with a variety of coactivator and corepressor
proteins, together with the differing spatiotemporal expression of
coregulators, illustrate a key role of coregulators in mediating
different tissue specific responses to steroidal ligand. Finally,
receptors for estrogen and progesterone can be activated in the absence
of steroidal ligand by phosphorylation pathways that modulate their
interactions with coregulator proteins.
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Estrogen receptor isoforms
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Receptors for estrogen are expressed as two structurally related
subtypes, ER
and ERß, that are encoded by two distinct genes
(10, 11). Both proteins share a high degree of amino acid
conservation in their DNA binding domains (97%) and exhibit a
significant but lesser degree of homology in their ligand binding
domains (58%). Two functionally distinct transactivation domains have
been identified in both proteins; the first (AF1) located in the poorly
conserved amino terminal domain and a second (AF2) located in the
ligand binding domain. AF1 and AF2 can contribute independently and
synergistically to receptor transcriptional activity in response to
agonist ligands and to ligand-independent phosphorylation pathways of
receptor activation and their relative activities vary depending on
cellular and promoter context (12, 13, 14).
ER
and ERß exhibit significant functional differences when
examined under similar conditions in cell-based transactivation assays.
Ligand binding profiles show both similar and distinct affinities of
each receptor for different estrogen agonist and antagonist ligands
(15). Transcriptional responses of each receptor to
ligands with which they interact with equal affinity (including
17ß-estradiol) also vary significantly due in part to sequence
divergence in their AF-1 domains (16) and to a
differential preference of individual subtypes for specific coactivator
proteins (17).
Receptor sequence divergence, however, accounts only in part for
the cell- and promoter-based variations in transcriptional responses to
a specific ligand. The transcription regulatory activity of either
receptor in response to ligand is highly dependent on the cellular and
promoter environment (12, 18). The identification of a
complex group of coregulator proteins that are recruited in a cell- and
promoter-specific manner to the ligand occupied estrogen receptors
reflects one of the most important recent advances in our understanding
of the cellular mechanisms leading to tissue diversity in
transcriptional responses to estrogen (19). Superimposed
upon this transcriptional diversity is the ability of different
estrogen receptor agonist and antagonist ligands to induce distinct
conformational changes in receptor structure, thereby generating a
spectrum of transcriptional responses with altered cell and promoter
dependency through ligand specific modulation of the conformational
context of AF domains (20, 21, 22, 23). In addition to providing a
mechanistic explanation for ability some estrogen receptor ligands
(SERMS) to elicit select tissue-specific agonist activities of
estrogen, the physiological implications of these findings are that
ligand-specific manipulation of coregulator interaction can be used to
achieve tissue and promoter specificity in transcriptional responses to
receptor.
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Progesterone receptor isoforms
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In contrast to estrogen, receptors for progesterone are expressed
as two distinct isoforms, PR-A and PR-B that arise from a single gene
(24, 25). The expression of both isoforms is conserved in
rodent and humans and overlaps spatiotemporally in female reproductive
tissues. However, the ratios of the individual isoforms vary in
reproductive tissues as a consequence of developmental
(26) and hormonal status (27) and during
carcinogenesis (28, 29).
The PR-A and PR-B differ in that the PR-B protein contains an
additional sequence of amino acids at its amino terminus that is not
contained in PR-A. This PR-B-specific domain encodes a third
transactivation function (AF3) that is absent from PR-A (30, 31). Recent evidence has demonstrated that the presence of AF3
allows binding of a subset of coactivators to PR-B that are not
efficiently recruited by progestin-bound PR-A (32). Thus,
when expressed individually in cultured cells, PR-A and PR-B display
different transactivation properties that are specific to both cell
type and target gene promoter context (33, 34, 35, 36).
Agonist-bound PR-B functions as a strong activator of transcription of
several PR dependent promoters and in a variety of cell types in which
PR-A is inactive. Further, when both isoforms are coexpressed in
cultured cells, in cell and promoter contexts in which agonist bound
PR-A is inactive, the PR-A can repress the activity of PR-B. This
repressor capability of PR-A also extends to other steroid receptors
including ER
(31, 37). Finally, the PR-A and PR-B
proteins also respond differently to P antagonists (reviewed in Ref.
38). While antagonist bound PR-A is inactive, antagonist
bound PR-B can be converted to a strongly active transcription factor
by modulating intracellular phosphorylation pathways
(39, 40, 41).
Although the sequence of the ligand binding domain of the PR-A and PR-B
is identical, the ability of different ligands to induce different
conformational changes in PR, together with the synergistic activity of
the amino and carboxy terminal activation domains (42),
predicts that PR-A or PR-B selective transcriptional regulation can be
achieved by manipulating ligand interactions with the carboxy
terminal.
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Defining the physiological spectrum of steroid receptor action.
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The use of genetically altered mouse mutants in which
expression of individual progesterone or estrogen receptor genes has
been specifically ablated has allowed direct examination of the
essential roles of these receptors in mediating physiological responses
to E and P. In addition to defining the individual and collective
contributions of receptor subtypes to the overall repertoire of hormone
action, these models facilitate examination of the contribution of
specific receptor subtypes to the activities of tissue-selective
receptor modulators. They have also proved a valuable means of
identifying alternative pathways of steroid action that are independent
of receptor activity as well as addressing the physiological
significance of ligand-independent pathways of receptor activation.
Finally, the receptor null mutant models serve as powerful tools to
dissect the molecular genetic pathways that are regulated by these
steroid receptors in vivo.
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Tissue-selective physiological responses to estrogen through
distinct receptor subtypes
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Selective ablation of ER
and ERß in mice has provided
definitive evidence that these receptor subtypes mediate distinct
physiological responses to estrogen both within the reproductive tract
and in nonreproductive tissues (11, 43, 44, 45). In general,
the different roles of these subtypes are a reflection of a mostly
segregated spatiotemporal distribution of each receptor. ER
is the
dominant subtype expressed throughout the female reproductive tract and
its ablation results in infertility due to defects in sexual behavioral
expression, neuroendocrine gonadotropin regulation, ovulation, uterine
function, and postpubertal mammary gland morphogenesis. The
ER
-subtype also plays an essential role in male fertility and
mediates many of the nonreproductive activities of estrogen including
regulation of bone resorption-remodeling in females, postnatal
endochondral bone growth in both sexes, cardiovascular endothelial
regeneration, adipogenesis, and sexual behavior (11). In
contrast to ER
, ablation of ERß results in less severe phenotypic
consequences with regard to estrogen signaling. ERß is expressed in
both the male and female reproductive tracts in a pattern largely
distinct from that of ER
and its ablation results in a subfertile
phenotype restricted to impaired female ovarian function
(44). Its expression and activity in this tissue are
complimentary to but distinct from those of ER
. Expression of ERß
has also been detected in several nonreproductive estrogen responsive
tissues including bone-forming osteoblasts, epiphyseal chondrocytes,
and the cardiovascular and central nervous systems. The protein was
recently shown to play an essential role in regulation of cortical
neuronal survival (46) and appears to contribute together
with ER
to protection against cardiovascular injury
(47)
While the tissue-selective contributions of ER
and ERß to estrogen
and SERM signaling are still under active investigation, the distinct
roles identified to date highlight the importance of these receptor
subtypes in mediating tissue selective physiological responses to
estrogen. The availability of ER
and ERß knockout models has also
allowed physiological testing and validation of the existence of
alternative signaling pathways that are independent of either ligand or
receptor. Thus, while uterotrophic responses stimulated by estrogen
require functional ER
, the ability of some catechol and
zenoestrogens to elicit such responses is independent of ER
(48, 49). In contrast, ER
is an essential mediator of
proliferative responses that are stimulated in this tissue by epidermal
growth factor acting in the absence of estrogen (50). This
latter observation has provided an important physiological validation
of the ligand-independent activation of estrogen receptors previously
observed in cell based transactivation assays.
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Tissue selectivity through progesterone receptor isoforms
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The differences in transcriptional activities and coregulator
interactions between the PR-A and PR-B observed in vitro
predicted that these proteins also may mediate different physiological
responses to progesterone. In addition, the selective ability of PR-A
to inhibit transcriptional responses induced by both PR-B and the
estrogen receptors suggested that PR-A has the capacity to diminish
overall progesterone responsiveness in certain tissues as well as
contribute to the antiestrogenic activities of progesterone previously
observed in the uterus.
Null mutation of the PR gene encoding both isoforms has provided
evidence of an essential role of PRs in a variety of female
reproductive and nonreproductive activities (51). Female
mice lacking both PRs exhibit impaired sexual behavior, neuroendocrine
gonadotropin regulation, anovulation, uterine dysfunction, and impaired
ductal branching morphogenesis and lobuloalveolar differentiation of
the mammary gland. PRs also play an essential role in regulation thymic
involution during pregnancy and in the cardiovascular system through
regulation of endothelial cell proliferation (52, 53).
Receptors for progesterone have also been identified in the central
nervous system and bone where progesterone has been implicated in both
cognitive function and bone maintenance. However, the essential role of
PRs in these regions has not yet been confirmed.
Recent studies have begun to address the individual contributions of
the PR-A and PR-B proteins to the physiological actions of progesterone
using mouse mutants in which expression of the PR-A (PRAKO) or PR-B
(PRBKO) isoform has been selectively ablated. Analysis of the
phenotypic consequences of these mutations on female reproductive
function has provided physiological proof of principle that the
distinct transcriptional responses to PR-A and PR-B observed in
cell-based transactivation assays are indeed reflected in an ability of
the individual isoforms to elicit distinct physiological responses to
progesterone. In PRAKO mice (54), the PR-B isoform
functions in a tissue-specific manner to mediate a subset of the
reproductive functions of PRs. Ablation of PR-A does not affect
responses of the mammary gland or thymus to P but results in severe
abnormalities in ovarian and uterine function. Surprisingly, the
absence of PR-A in PRAKO uteri revealed an unexpected P dependent
proliferative activity of PR-B in the epithelium and demonstrated that
PR-A is essential to diminish both progesterone (acting via PRB) and
estrogen-mediated proliferative responses in this tissue. The
observation that PR-A is essential to inhibit estrogen induced
proliferation in the uterus is consistent with previous observations
that agonist bound PR-A is capable of inhibiting estrogen-dependent
transcriptional activation in cell-based transactivation assays
(37). Notably, this inhibitory activity of PRA was tissue
specific and did not extend to the mammary gland where both PR-A and
PR-B act as proliferative mediators of P.
Consistent with the distinct tissue- and promoter-specific activities
of PR-A and PR-B observed in tissue culture studies, the
tissue-selective activities of PR-B observed in PRAKO mice were
associated with an ability of this isoform to regulate a subset of
progesterone responsive target genes rather than to differences in its
spatiotemporal expression relative to the PR-A isoform
(54).
In contrast to the reproductive defects observed in PRAKO mice, more
recent studies using PRBKO mice have shown that ablation of PR-B does
not affect either ovarian, uterine, or thymic responses to progesterone
but results in reduced mammary ductal morphogenesis (Jericevic,
B., and O. M. Conneely, unpublished observations). Thus,
PR-A is both necessary and sufficient to elicit these P-dependent
reproductive responses while the PR-B isoform is required to elicit
normal proliferative responses of the mammary gland to P.
From a mechanistic standpoint, the differences in physiological
activities observed between the PR-A and PR-B isoforms provides an
important illustration of the key role played by the amino terminal AF
domains in distinguishing tissue specific responses to steroidal
ligand. The results demonstrate that the inclusion or deletion of the
N-terminal AF3 domain in PR is sufficient to alter tissue specific
physiological responses to P.
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Contribution of steroid receptor coregulators to physiological
diversity of hormonal response
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The characterization and mode of action of coregulator proteins
that mediate the transcriptional activity of steroid receptors have
been intensely examined in recent years. Agonist ligand or
ligand-independent activation of receptors is associated with
recruitment of a complex group of coactivators including
nucleosome-disrupting histone acetyltransferases (SRC family members,
PCAF and P300), mediator proteins that bridge receptor complexes with
the general transcription factor complexes (e.g.
DRIP/TRAP220/ARC, and mediator), an RNA helicase, p68 and components of
the ubiquitin proteosome degradation system including the ubiquitin
ligases, E6AP and RPF1(9, 14, 55, 56). A growing number of corepressors
associated with antagonist ligand repression of transcriptional
activation have also been identified including the histone
deacetylases, N-COR and SMRT (57, 58) and the estrogen
receptor interacting proteins RIP140 (59) and REA
(60).
Considering the complex array of coregulator proteins that can interact
with both estrogen and progesterone receptors, tissue selective
expression of distinct subsets of coregulator proteins would be
expected to strongly influence receptor dependent biological responses
in specific tissues.
Results from recent studies on the comparative spatiotemporal
expression of coregulators and steroid receptors in mammalian tissues,
together with the generation of knockout mouse models carrying null
mutations of several coregulator proteins, have provided a key proof of
concept of the essential role of coregulator proteins in mediating
tissue selective physiological responses to steroidal ligand.
It is becoming apparent that the spatiotemporal expression of some
coregulator proteins in steroid responsive tissues is both
developmentally and hormonally controlled. For example, the expression
of coactivator SRC-1 is dissociated from estrogen receptor-expressing
cells during postpubertal mammary gland morphogenesis but becomes
colocalized with ER-positive cells during pregnancy (61, 62). A growing number of recent reports have also associated
aberrant expression of coregulator proteins with the development of
breast cancer. Significantly, these reports reveal a developing pattern
of increased coactivator levels associated with tumorigenesis while the
expression of corepressors is significantly decreased. For example,
levels of CBP, TRAP220, and the SRC family members, SRC-2/TIF2 and
AIB-1/SRC-3 are all elevated breast tumors (63, 64).
However, most notable among these is AIB-1/SRC-3, which is
overexpressed in 60% of human breast cancers (65).
Conversely, levels of the corepressor, N-Cor, are decreased in invasive
relative to intraductal carcinomas (64) and with the
development of tamoxifen resistance in a mouse model of breast cancer
(66). Definitive evidence of the essential role of
specific coregulators in mediation of tissue-specific responses to
estrogen and progesterone has recently been provided by genetic
ablation of a few coregulator proteins in mice. Analysis of the
reproductive phenotypes of mice carrying a null mutation of SRC-1
(67) and SRC-3 (68) indicate that these
coactivators regulate mostly distinct physiological activities that are
due to a generally segregated spatiotemporal expression pattern of the
two proteins. However, with regard to their role in E- and P-dependent
reproductive physiology, deletion of either coactivator results in a
partial hormone resistance in mammary gland developmental responses to
E and P, indicating essential nonredundant roles for both proteins in
this tissue. In contrast, only SRC-1 is expressed in the uterus and its
expression is essential to elicit full growth and differentiative
responses of this tissue to E and P, whereas uterine function is
unaffected by deletion of SRC-3. Validation of the essential role of
steroid receptor corepressors in mediating the transcriptional activity
of estrogen receptors has also recently been provided by gene targeting
approaches. Analysis of the transcriptional responses of mouse
embryonic fibroblasts carrying a null mutation of N-CoR to the estrogen
receptor antagonist, 4-OHT, demonstrated that this protein was
essential to mediate the inhibitory activity of the antagonist.
Ablation of N-CoR resulted in a conversion of 4-OHT to a full receptor
agonist (69). Finally, ablation of the corepressor,
RIP140, in mice resulted ovulatory dysfunction and an ovarian phenotype
partially overlapping that previously observed in PRKO mice, whereas
uterine implantation was unaffected (70). However, while
the phenotype of RIP140 null mice supports a tissue-specific
contribution of the protein to reproductive function, a direct
connection between the anovulatory phenotype and the corepressor
activity of RIP140 remains to be established.
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Conclusions
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During the past decade we have witnessed outstanding progress in
our understanding of the molecular pathways by which steroid receptors
elicit diverse physiological responses to hormonal signals. It is clear
that tissue and promoter selectivity in hormone action is determined
not only by the tissue-selective expression of distinct receptor
subtypes but also of a complex group of receptor interacting
coregulator proteins whose function is essential in establishing the
diverse repertoire of transcriptional responses to hormone. The central
role of coregulators in mediating physiological responses to estrogen
and progesterone has only recently begun to be appreciated. The
availability of transgenic and knock-out models to facilitate
examination of the physiological roles of individual coregulators,
together with the use of differential gene array technologies to
identify tissue-specific downstream targets of the hormonal response,
should facilitate dissection of the steroid-dependent molecular genetic
pathways influenced by specific coregulators. From the limited
physiological analysis carried out to date, it is becoming apparent
that abnormal coregulator function may contribute to a variety of
hormone- related diseases including steroid resistance syndromes,
reproductive dysfunction, and tumorigenesis. Continued efforts to alter
coregulator recruitment to receptors by manipulation of receptor
conformation using novel ligands together with a clearer understanding
of the tissue-specific molecular pathways influenced by specific
coregulators should facilitate the development of new optimized tissue
specific ligands for hormonal therapy.
Received April 10, 2001.
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