The Drosophila FTZ-F1 Nuclear Receptor Mediates Juvenile Hormone Activation of E75A Gene Expression through an Intracellular Pathway

Juvenile hormone (JH) regulates a wide variety of biological activities in holometabolous insects, ranging from vitellogenesis and caste determination in adults to the timing of metamorphosis in larvae. The mechanism of JH signaling in such a diverse array of processes remains either unknown or cont...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2011-09, Vol.286 (38), p.33689-33700
Hauptverfasser: Dubrovsky, Edward B., Dubrovskaya, Veronica A., Bernardo, Travis, Otte, Valerie, DiFilippo, Robert, Bryan, Heather
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Juvenile hormone (JH) regulates a wide variety of biological activities in holometabolous insects, ranging from vitellogenesis and caste determination in adults to the timing of metamorphosis in larvae. The mechanism of JH signaling in such a diverse array of processes remains either unknown or contentious. We previously found that the nuclear receptor gene E75A is activated in S2 cells as a primary response to JH. Here, by expressing an intracellular form of JH esterase, we demonstrate that JH must enter the cell in order to activate E75A. To find intracellular receptors involved in the JH response, we performed an RNAi screen against nuclear receptor genes expressed in this cell line and identified the orphan receptor FTZ-F1. Removal of FTZ-F1 prevents JH activation of E75A, whereas overexpression enhances activation, implicating FTZ-F1 as a critical component of the JH response. FTZ-F1 is bound in vivo to multiple enhancers upstream of E75A, suggesting that it participates in direct JH-mediated gene activation. To better define the role of FTZ-F1 in JH signaling, we investigated interactions with candidate JH receptors and found that the bHLH-PAS proteins MET and GCE both interact with FTZ-F1 and can activate transcription through the FTZ-F1 response element. Removal of endogenous GCE, but not MET, prevents JH activation of E75A. We propose that FTZ-F1 functions as a competence factor by loading JH signaling components to the promoter, thus facilitating the direct regulation of E75A gene expression by JH. JH is a critical insect hormone, but its mechanism of action is contentious. JH activates E75A through an intracellular pathway utilizing FTZ-F1 and GCE, which form a transcriptionally active heterodimer. FTZ-F1 functions as a competence factor that facilitates JH activation of gene expression. As a competence factor for multiple insect hormones, FTZ-F1 could be a mediator of hormonal cross-talk.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M111.273458