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23 August 2018 Structural analysis of estrogen receptors: interaction between estrogen receptors and cav-1 within the caveolae
Mayra B. Pastore, Rosalina Villalon Landeros, Dong-bao Chen, Ronald R. Magness
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Abstract

Pregnancy is a physiologic state of substantially elevated estrogen biosynthesis that maintains vasodilator production by uterine artery endothelial cells (P-UAECs) and thus uterine perfusion. Estrogen receptors (ER-α and ER-β; ESR1 and ESR2) stimulate nongenomic rapid vasodilatory responses partly through activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). Rapid estrogenic responses are initiated by the ∼⃒4% ESRs localized to the plasmalemma of endothelial cells. Caveolin-1 (Cav-1) interactions within the caveolae are theorized to influence estrogenic effects mediated by both ESRs. Hypothesis: Both ESR1 and ESR2 display similar spatial partitioning between the plasmalemma and nucleus of UAECs and have similar interactions with Cav-1 at the plasmalemma. Using transmission electron microscopy, we observed numerous caveolae structures in UAECs, while immunogold labeling and subcellular fractionations identified ESR1 and ESR2 in three subcellular locations: membrane, cytosol, and nucleus. Bioinformatics approaches to analyze ESR1 and ESR2 transmembrane domains identified no regions that facilitate ESR interaction with plasmalemma. However, sucrose density centrifugation and Cav-1 immunoisolation columns uniquely demonstrated very high protein–protein association only between ESR1, but not ESR2, with Cav-1. These data demonstrate (1) both ESRs localize to the plasmalemma, cytosol and nucleus; (2) neither ESR1 nor ESR2 contain a classic region that crosses the plasmalemma to facilitate attachment; and (3) ESR1, but not ESR2, can be detected in the caveolar subcellular domain demonstrating ESR1 is the only ESR bound in close proximity to Cav-1 and eNOS within this microdomain. Lack of protein–protein interaction between Cav-1 and ESR2 demonstrates a novel independent association of these proteins at the plasmalemma.

Summary Sentence

Since ESR1 and ESR2 plasma membrane location are respectively affiliated with Cav-1-dependent and Cav-1-indepenent mechanisms, a novel difference of ER regulation in endothelial cells derived from the uterine vasculature was identified.

© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for the Study of Reproduction. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com
Mayra B. Pastore, Rosalina Villalon Landeros, Dong-bao Chen, and Ronald R. Magness "Structural analysis of estrogen receptors: interaction between estrogen receptors and cav-1 within the caveolae," Biology of Reproduction 100(2), 495-504, (23 August 2018). https://doi.org/10.1093/biolre/ioy188
Received: 1 March 2018; Accepted: 20 August 2018; Published: 23 August 2018
KEYWORDS
caveolae
endothelium
eNOS
ER-α
ER-β
ESR1
ESR2
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