The superfamily of nuclear receptors comprises transcription factors that depend on a ligand for their activity. In addition, the superfamily includes a number of orphan receptors, for which no ligand is known. We report here that the orphan receptor estrogen receptor related alpha receptor (ERRa) stimulates the expression of the thyroid hormone receptor alpha (TRa) gene promoter. We characterized a responsive site that is both necessary and su cient for ERRa-induced transactivation. In addition, we show that both TRa and ERRa are coexpressed in embryonic intestine, brown fat and heart as well as in the adult gonads. In the testis, expression of both receptors can be found in the seminiferous tubes where it is totally restricted to spermatocytes I. Altogether this suggests that TRa is an in vivo target of ERRa.
Estrogen receptor-related receptor alpha (ERR alpha) is an orphan nuclear receptor closely related to the estrogen receptor (ER), whose expression covers various stages of embryonic development and persists in certain adult tissues. We show that ERR alpha binds as a homodimer on a specific target sequence, the SFRE (SF-1 response element), already known to respond to the orphan nuclear receptor SF-1. Target sequences that are related to the SFRE and that discriminate between ERR alpha and SF-1 were identified. We have also analyzed the transcriptional properties of the ERR alpha originating from various species. All ERR alpha orthologs act as potent transactivators through the consensus SFRE. ERR alpha activity depends on the putative AF2AD domain, as well as on a serum compound that is withdrawn by charcoal treatment, suggesting the existence of a critical regulating factor brought by serum.
We have determined the complete nucleotide sequence of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the dogfish, Scyliorhinus canicula. The 16,697-bp-long mtDNA possesses a gene organization identical to that of the Osteichthyes, but different from that of the sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus. The main features of the mtDNA of osteichthyans were thus established in the common ancestor to chondrichthyans and osteichthyans. The phylogenetic analysis confirms that the Chondrichthyes are the sister group of the Osteichthyes.
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