A. Chauchereau et al., PHOSPHORYLATION SITES IN LIGAND-INDUCED AND LIGAND-INDEPENDENT ACTIVATION OF THE PROGESTERONE-RECEPTOR, Biochemistry, 33(45), 1994, pp. 13295-13303
Steroid hormone receptors are phosphoproteins that undergo hyperphosph
orylation upon binding of hormone. The mechanism and the role of this
reaction remain poorly understood. Two-dimensional analysis of ligand-
free progesterone receptor (PR) tryptic digests showed the existence o
f seven main phosphopeptides. Incubation of the cells with the progest
in R5020 led to a global increase in the levels of PR phosphorylation.
However, the same phosphopeptides were seen, and their levels of labe
ling relative to each other were unchanged. A similar result was obser
ved after incubation of the cells with the antiprogestin RU486. The an
tiprogestin ZK98299 demonstrated only half of the activity of RU486 in
terms of receptor hyperphosphorylation, but the same phosphopeptides,
proportionally labeled to the same extent, were observed by chromatog
raphy electrophoresis. Ligand-induced DNA binding did not play a role
in receptor hyperphosphorylation since the mutant Delta 547-592, which
is devoid of the first zinc finger region, exhibited the same phospho
peptides, labeled to the same extent, as did wild-type receptor after
incubation of cells with hormone. These results suggest that the same
kinase(s) act in vivo on ligand-free and on agonist or antagonist-boun
d progesterone receptor. Binding of different ligands produces differe
nt conformational changes in the ligand binding domain of the receptor
which enhance, to varying extents, affinity of the receptor for the k
inase(s). The DNA binding region also plays a role in the interaction
with the kinase(s), although binding to DNA per se is not necessary fo
r the hyperphosphorylation of the receptor to take place. Similar phos
phorylation patterns were induced by agonists and antagonists, suggest
ing that receptor hyperphosphorylation was not directly related to its
transactivation properties. This conclusion was further supported in
a cell-free transcription assay using purified receptor which had or h
ad not undergone hyperphosphorylation in vivo. In conditions where the
ir phosphorylation state was not changed during the incubation, the tw
o receptor species produced the same enhancement of transcription. Rec
eptor phosphorylation patterns were also shown to be unchanged during
cAMP-induced, PR-mediated increase of transcription. Thus, both ligand
-dependent and ligand-independent enhancement of PR biological activit
y is unrelated to a change in its phosphorylation state.