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Interactionsofultraspiraclewithecdysonereceptorin the
transduction ofecdysone-andjuvenile hormone-signaling
Fang Fang
2
, Yong Xu
1
, Davy Jones
2
and Grace Jones
1
1 Department of Biology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA
2 The Graduate Center for Toxicology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA
Keywords
ecdysone receptor; juvenile hormone;
methyl epoxyfarnesoate; retinoid-x-receptor;
ultraspiracle
Correspondence
G. Jones, Department of Biology, University
of Kentuckey, 304 Morgan Building,
Lexington, KY 40506, USA
Fax: +1 859 257 7505
Tel: +1 859 257 2105
E-mail: gjones@pop.uky.edu
(Received 14 September 2004, revised 13
January 2005, accepted 21 January 2005)
doi:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2005.04578.x
Analyses of integration of two-hormone signaling through the vertebrate
nuclear hormone receptors, for which the retinoid X receptor is one part-
ner, have generated a number of mechanistic models, including those des-
cribed as ‘subordination’ models wherein ligand-activation of one partner
is subordinate to the liganded state ofthe other partner. However, mecha-
nisms by which two-hormone signaling is integrated through invertebrate
nuclear hormone-binding receptors has not been heretofore experimentally
elucidated. This report investigates the integration of signaling of inverteb-
rate juvenile hormone (JH) and 20-OH ecdysone (20OHE) at the level of
identified nuclear receptors (ultraspiracle andecdysone receptor), which
transcriptionally activate a defined model core promoter (JH esterase gene),
through specified hormone response elements (DR1 and IR1). Application
of JH III, or 20OHE, to cultured Sf9 cells transfected with a DR1JHE-
CoreLuciferase (or IR1JHECoreLuciferase) reporter promoter each induced
expression ofthe reporter. Cotreatment of transfected cells with both hor-
mones yielded a greater than additive effect on transcription, for especially
the IR1JHECoreLuciferase reporter. Overexpression in Sf9 cells of recom-
binant Drosophila melanogaster ultraspiracle (dUSP) fostered formation of
dUSP oligomer (potentially homodimer), as measured by coimmunopreci-
pitation assay and electrophoretic mobility assay (EMSA) on a DR1 probe,
and also increased the level of transcription in response to JH III, but did
not increase the transcriptional response to either 20OHE treatment alone
or to the two hormones together. Inapposite, overexpression of recombin-
ant D. melanogaster ecdysonereceptor (dEcR) inthe transfected cells gen-
erated dUSP ⁄ dEcR heterodimer [as measured by EMSA (supershift) on a
DR1 probe] and increased the transcriptional response to 20OHE-alone
treatment, but did not increase the transcriptional response to the JH III-
alone treatment. Our studies provide evidence that in this model system,
JH III-activation ofthe reporter promoter is through USP oligomer
(homodimer) that does not contain EcR, while the 20OHE-activation is
through the USP ⁄ EcR heterodimer. These results also show that the integ-
ration of JH III and 20OHE signaling is through the USP ⁄ EcR hetero-
dimer, but that when the EcR partner is unliganded, the USP partner in
this system is unable to transduce the JH III-activation.
Abbreviations
20OHE, 20-OH ecdysone; DR1 and IR1, direct repeat and inverted repeat with one intervening base between repeats, respectively; EcR,
ecdysone receptor; EMSA, electrophoretic mobility shift assay; JH, juvenile hormone; JHECore, core promoter from juvenile hormone
esterase gene; RA, retinoic acid; RXR, retinoid-X-receptor; USP, ultraspiracle.
FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS 1577
Nuclear hormone receptors play key roles in metazoan
development, metabolic homeostasis, and response to
xenobiotics. Some of these nuclear receptors bind lig-
ands that modulate the regulatory effect of these recep-
tors on gene transcription, while other receptors are
apparently constituitively active and unregulated by
dynamic equilibrium with ligand [1]. For example, the
retinoic acid receptor (RAR) responds to signaling by
all-trans retinoic acid (at-RA) and 9-cis RA, in regula-
tion of fetal limb development [2]. Thereceptor FXR
binds to catabolites in regulation of sterol pathways,
the receptor PXR is activated by binding to certain
xenobiotic compounds, while transcription-enhancing
activity ofthereceptor CAR is suppressed by binding
to xenobiotic compounds [3].
Each ofthe above ligand-binding receptors and their
close relatives functions as a heterodimer with the
(also homodimer-forming) retinoid-X-receptor (RXR),
which itself can be activated by the RAR ligand 9-cis
RA [4]. The occurrence of such multiple partner recep-
tor complexes, and their corresponding multiple lig-
ands, raises questions about the integration of multiple
ligand signaling through the same receptor complex.
There is some controversy inthe nuclear receptor field
as to whether RXR, the vertebrate ortholog of USP,
can independently bind ligand when RXR is in com-
plex with certain nuclear receptors. For example, Kersten
et al. [5] detected independent binding of 9-cis RA by
RXR when in complex with RAR. However, data
of Thompson et al. [6] suggested that ligand-induced
transcriptional activation by RXR is ‘subordinate’ to
whether its RAR partner has bound ligand. There has
also been a question as to whether the allosteric effect
of RAR ligand onto RXR occurs by permitting RXR
to bind ligand or by allowing liganded RXR to disso-
ciate corepressors and recruit coactivators [7,8]. For
other receptor partners of RXR, such as ligandless
NGFI-B, it is argued that the dynamic equilibrium is
more in favor of RXR binding coactivator in response
to ligand even if its heterodimer partner (e.g. NGFI-B)
is not liganded [9]. Finally, Germain et al. [10] propose
that the ability of liganded RXR to bind p160-family
coactivators when in complex with apoRAR is a func-
tion ofthe endogenous titer ofthe coactivator.
There also appears to be variation among RXR-
partners as to whether ligand binding by the partner is
additive to the effect of RXR binding of 9-cis RA [11],
or is synergistic [8,12], or even otherwise allosteric
in affecting RXR ligand-activated function [13]. For
example, a synthetic ligand of RXR exerts an allosteric
effect on the RAR partner such that the unliganded
RAR partner adopts an activated conformation [14].
In the opposite direction, there is evidence that agonist
ligand for RXR can allosterically antagonize the lig-
and-dependent activity ofthe heterodimer partner
FXR [11].
Thus far, essentially all of such studies on integra-
tion of hormone signaling using cloned nuclear recep-
tors have involved vertebrate receptors. However, one
of the most dramatic examples of integrated signaling
by lipoidal regulators is insect metamorphosis, which
is regulated by the interplay between the steroid 20-
OH ecdysone (20OHE) andthe terpenoid methyl
epoxyfarnesoate [juvenile hormone III, (JHIII)]. The
20OHE receptor (EcR) has been isolated for over a
decade [15], and was determined to function in vivo in
heterodimer withultraspiracle (USP), an ortholog of
RXR [16]. Most studies on the EcR as a ligand bind-
ing receptor have focussed EcR binding of its ligand
while USP is premised or utilized as a ligandless dimer
partner. More recently, our studies in a model Sf9 cell
transfection system utilizing a natural core promoter
of the JH-activated juvenile hormone esterase gene [17]
have established that USP can transduce transcrip-
tional activation by JH III by way of binding of JH III
or closely related structures to the ligand binding
pocket of USP [18]. This binding of JH III by USP
induces change in USP tertiary conformation [18] and
induces or stabilizes USP homodimerization [19].
There has been renewed interest in how JH and
20-OH ecdysone signaling are integrated at a molecular
level [20,21]. Yet, thus far, there have been no reports
on the existence and nature of integration of JH III
and 20OHE signaling through the molecules of the
EcR ⁄ USP heterodimer complex. In this study, we used
cloned EcR and USP to assess the relationship of the
JH III-USP axis in JH III-transcriptional activation to
the 20OHE-EcR axis in ecdysone-transcriptional acti-
vation.
Results
JH III and 20OHE synergism of promoter activity
In the Sf9 cell transfection system, the JHECore pro-
moter does not significantly respond to treatment of
transfected cells with either 20OHE alone or JH III
(Fig. 1A). Placement of DR1 hormone response ele-
ments 5¢ to the JHECore promoter confers a twofold
induction of promoter activity by 1 lm 20OHE and a
twofold induction by 100 lm JH III. However, more
significantly, the combination ofthe two hormones
yielded a sixfold induction (Fig. 1B). This transcrip-
tional interaction of JH III and 20OHE occurred over
the 10 nm to 1 lm range of dose-dependent response
of the DR1JHECore to the 20OHE (Fig. 1C).
Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling F. Fang et al.
1578 FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS
We tested whether this transcriptional interaction
between JH III and 20-OHE is influenced by the
nature ofthe hormone response element. For this
purpose, we compared the DR1JHECore promoter
reporter with an IR1JHECore promoter reporter.
These two motifs (DR1 and IR1) contain identical half
sites andthe same intervening single base, the differ-
ence being the orientation ofthe second half site as in
the same direction (DR1) or opposite direction (IR1)
as the first half site. Each transfected promoter con-
struct was exposed to either a dose range of JH III
(0.1–30 lm) inthe presence of 1 lm 20-OHE or the
dose range of JH III alone, andthe activation ratio in
relation to the solvent (EtOH) treatment calculated. As
shown in Fig. 2, when the data for activation by
JH III alone vs. JH III plus 20-OHE were plotted
for each promoter construct, the resultant slopes of
the plots are not the same. The shallower slope for the
IR1JHECore promoter construct compared to the
DR1bJHE construct shows that the IR1JHECore con-
struct transduced a greater effect of JH III on 20OHE
than occurred withthe DR1JHECore construct. For
the IR1JHECore, JH III alone at 30 lm yielded an
approximately twofold induction, 20OHE alone at
1 lm yielded an approximately 35-fold induction, but
together the two hormones yielded a 45-fold induction,
which is distinctly greater than an additive effect.
These results show that the transcriptional interaction
of these two hormones is transduced through the hor-
mone response element, and not through some other
region ofthe transfected plasmids. Functionally
important is that this result shows that the opposite
orientation ofthe second half site of what is otherwise
an identical hormone response element causes the two
response elements to differ in their effectiveness to pro-
mote this interaction between JH III and 20-OHE.
USP Interaction with DNA and EcR
We have demonstrated previously that under our con-
ditions, purified dUSP can bind to the DR12 motif
[19]. Using similar conditions, we confirmed by elec-
trophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) and supershift
with anti-USP Ig that purified dUSP can bind to the
same DR1 motif as is contained inthe DR1JHECore
reporter used inthe cell transfection experiments
(Fig. 3A, arrow). We next assessed whether USP, as it
exists in Sf9 nuclear extracts, can bind to this same
DR1 motif. In EMSA assay, a single protein–DR1
Fig. 1. Induction of DR1JHECore promoter
by juvenile hormone III (JH III) and 20-OH
ecdysone (20OHE). (A) JHECore promoter is
unresponsive to JH III and 20-OHE. (B)
Placement of five DR1 motifs immediately
5¢- to the JHECore renders it mildly
inducible by JH III or 20-OHE, and strongly
inducible by treatment withthe two
hormones combined. (C) Over a range of
0.01–1.0 l
M the DR1JHECore responds
more strongly to cotreatment with 100 l
M
JH III than to 20OHE alone.
Fig. 2. Differential interaction of JH III with 20OHE as mediated by
different hormone response elements. The JHECore promoter was
placed under the enhancement of either DR1 or IR1 hormone
response elements, and subjected to Sf9 cell transfection assay
and subsequent treatment with ethanol, a dose-range of JH III,
and ⁄ or 1 l
M 20OHE. Plotted here for the two constructs is the
relationship between the level of activation obtained for a given
construct due to JH III only vs. the level of activation obtained
when treated with both JH III and 20OHE. The IR1 motif, by its
flatter slope, yielded a much stronger effect of adding JHIII to
20OHE than was exhibited through the DR1 motif.
F. Fang et al. Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling
FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS 1579
complex is observed (Fig. 3B). The specificity of the
binding is again confirmed by the competition of unla-
belled DR1 probe. The presence of USP inthe com-
plex was confirmed by a supershift formed upon the
addition of a monoclonal antibody (AB11) specific for
USP (arrow). The specificity ofthe supershift was con-
firmed by the absence of a supershift when a monoclo-
nal antibody to an unrelated antigen (ELAV) was
used. These results confirm that USP binds to the
same DR1 hormone response motif that is used in the
DR1JHECore transfection construct.
We also used this system to test for the binding of
EcR to the same DR1 hormone response element. As
the monoclonal antibody to the Drosophila ecdysone
receptor (dEcR) does not cross-react well with the
endogenous Sf9 ecdysone receptor, we transfected Sf9
cells with a plasmid expressing dEcR, and harvested
the cells for binding ofthe extract to the DR1 probe.
As shown in Fig. 3C, a specific complex was observed
binding to the probe, which could be competed by
unlabelled probe (self) DNA, but not by an unrelated
(nonself) DNA. The complex could be supershifted by
the monoclonal antibody to dEcR (arrow), establishing
that EcR expressed in Sf9 cells can bind to the DR1
motif.
The direct interaction of USP with EcR inthe Sf9
nuclear extracts was assessed by coimmunoprecipita-
tion assay. When we transfected the Sf9 cells with a
dEcR-expressing plasmid (to again use the dEcR-speci-
fic antibody), in order to also increase the amount of
intracellular USP to a level detectable inthe coimmuno-
precipitation procedure, we also contransfected the
same cells with a plasmid overexpressing dUSP. The
cells were harvested and nuclear extracts were pre-
pared. After incubation ofthe extracts with monoclo-
nal antibody to the dUSP, and immunoprecipitation of
the complex, the protein complex was subjected to
SDS ⁄ PAGE and immunoblotting with monoclonal
antibody to dEcR. As shown in Fig. 3D, a positive
immunoblot signal ofthe correct molecular size for
dEcR was obtained. As a negative control, no signal
was obtained when only dUSP or only dEcR was
overexpressed. (Preliminary experiments using a mono-
clonal antibody against dUSP for both the immuno-
precipitation and for the immunoblot ofthe precipitate
confirmed that the dUSP was immunoprecipitated in
the control receiving a dUSP-expressing plasmid only).
Thus, a heterodimer complex of USP and EcR exists
in the extracts of Sf9 cells.
JH III activation pathway is not identical
to 20OHE activation pathway
The dose dependence ofthe action of JH III to induce
transcription ofthe DR1JHECore construct was
then assessed. Induction of this promoter construct by
treatment ofthe transfected cells with JH III was
detectable inthe mid-micromolar range (Fig. 4A). This
was compared at the same time to the dose depend-
ence of JH III action to increase the transcriptional
induction of 1 lm 20OHE. As shown in Fig. 4A, the
region ofthe dose-dependent JH III action to increase
AB C D
Fig. 3. Binding ofultraspiracle (USP) to DR1 motif and to ecdysonereceptor (EcR). (A) Electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) of recom-
binant dUSP binding to DR1 probe (left lane), and supershift (arrow) with AB11anti-dUSP monoclonal Ig (middle lane). The negative control
shows no supershift with monoclonal antibody against irrelevant ELAV protein (right lane). (B) EMSA with DR1 probe using nuclear extract
from Sf9 cells. The major shift-band is specific on account of its competition with self but not with nonself unlabelled competitor. The com-
plex on the DR1 probe contains USP, as seen by the supershift (arrow) withthe AB11 anti-USP monoclonal Ig. (C) EMSA with DR1 probe
using nuclear extract from Sf9 cells transfected with expression plasmid for dEcR. The major shift-band (leftmost lane) is specific on account
of its competition with self but not with nonself unlabelled competitor. The complex on the DR1 probe contains dEcR, as seen by the super-
shift (arrow) withthe antidEcR monoclonal antibody. (D) USP binds with EcR in Sf9 nuclear extracts. Lysates from Sf9 cells cotransfected
with plasmids expressing dUSP, or dEcR, or both, or empty expression vector, were first immunoprecipitated with AB11 anti-dUSP mAb,
and the pellet subjected to immunoblotting (following SDS ⁄ PAGE), using anti-dEcR mAb.
Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling F. Fang et al.
1580 FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS
the transcriptional activation by 20OHE closely paral-
lels the mid-micromolar region ofthe action of JH III
alone to induce transcription. These results suggest
that the mechanism of synergism is not one in which
the presence of 20OHE lowers the concentration of
JH III at which JH III exerts its transcriptional action.
These results also are also evidence that the site of
JH III action for its effect to alone induce transcrip-
tion ofthe DR1JHECore is the same as, or has a titra-
tion curve indistinguishable in this transfection assay
from, the site of JH III action for its transcriptional
interaction with 20OHE.
Our previous studies have demonstrated that JH III
induction of DR12JHECore promoter activity in the
Sf9 cells system operates through JH III binding to
USP [18,19]. We have presently also shown that both
recombinant dUSP and Sf9 cell USP can bind to the
DR1 motif (Fig. 3, above). Thus, we tested the partici-
pation of USP in JH III activation of DR1JHECore
by observing the effect of increasing the concentration
of exogenous dUSP on the induction caused by JH III.
As shown in Fig. 4B, as the amount of plasmid over-
expressing USP is progressively increased, the fold-
induction caused by treatment with JH III alone
increased. Yet, under the same conditions, transfection
of increasing amounts of USP-expressing plasmid does
not cause an increase in response to 20OHE alone, but
instead causes a decline inthe level of induction caused
by treatment with 20OHE alone. All published reports
on USP function thus far indicate that USP acts as a
dimer and not as a monomer, so it is unlikely that the
overexpressed dUSP here is transducing JH signaling
as a monomer, and we have shown previously that
both half-sites ofthe DR12 motif are necessary for
DR12JHECore promoter to transduce JH III signaling
[18]. Thus, in this experiment, the exogenous amount
of USP that enhances JH III signaling but not 20OHE
signaling could be (a) overexpressed in sufficient excess
over the endogenous EcR that by mass-action is favor-
ing USP dimerizing with its (abundant) self or with a
partner that is not EcR, and by competitive binding
thereby prevents EcR ⁄ dUSP complex from binding to
the hormone response element, or (b) that some other
factor that is needed for 20OHE activation, but not
JH III-activation, is already limiting before the over-
expression of more exogenous USP.
Fig. 4. Effect of treatment with hormones, andofreceptor expression, on activation ofthe DR1JHECore reporter promoter. (A) Activation of
the DR1JHECore promoter by JH III alone (black histogram bars) or together with 1 l
M 20-OHE (white histogram bars). The values for JH III
alone are plotted at 20· their actual value, to enable more direct visualization that the range of JH III action alone is over a similar range of
its action inthe presence of 20OHE. These data are from a single experiment. (B) Differential effect of transfection of increasing concentra-
tions of dUSP-expressing plasmid on action of JH III alone (black histogram bars) or 20OHE alone (white histogram bars) to activate
DR1JHECore reporter promoter. Data are average (±SE) of three independent experiments. (C) Transfection of increasing concentrations of
dUSP-expressing plasmid, while increasing the transcriptional activation arising from treatment with JH III alone (d), does not result in
enhancement of 20OHE-activation by JH III (s). Data points are the average of two independent experiments. (D) Effect of transfection of
increasing concentrations of dEcR-expressing plasmid on action of JH III alone (black histogram bars) or 20OHE alone (white histogram bars)
to activate DR1JHECore reporter promoter. Data are average (± SE) of two independent experiments.
F. Fang et al. Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling
FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS 1581
We then assessed the effect of overexpression of
dUSP on the transcriptional activation pathways that
are induced by 20OHE alone and on the interaction of
JH III and 20OHE. In order to visualize more clearly
the effects, the data were analyzed for the fold change
in the hormonal activation that was caused by the
transfection of a particular amount of USP-expressing
plasmid. So, for example, the value of 2.0· for
1000 ng of wtdUSP-expressing plasmid means that the
JH III induction was yet another 2· higher than the
induction already caused by JH III inthe absence of
transfected dUSP. As shown in Fig. 4C, as more USP-
expressing plasmid was transfected, there was an
increasingly greater transcriptional activation by
JH III, above and beyond that being transduced in the
absence of exogenous USP. However, under the same
conditions, increasing the amount of dUSP-expressing
plasmid did not increase the transcriptional activity
caused by either 20OHE alone or by 20OJE together
with JH III. These results raise the possibility that the
nature ofthe dUSP requirement for transcriptional
activation by JH III alone is not the same activation
pathway (i.e. not the same molecular complex) as that
involved inthe action of JH III and 20OHE together.
We tested the hypothesis that USP forms a homo-
dimer under the above condition where overexpressed
dUSP aids JH III activity, but which does not aid
transcription induced by either the 20OHE activity or
the JH III ⁄ 20OHE. We cotransfected Sf9 cells with
dUSP possessing two different tags (as a GFP-dUSP
fusion and as HA-tagged dUSP). As shown in Fig. 5A,
the control of direct immunoblotting of total cell lysate
proteins showed that the higher molecular size
(101 kDa) GFP-dUSP fusion andthe HA-USP
(55 kDa) are indeed expressed in cells transfected with
their expression plasmids, but not in cells transfected
with empty pIE1-4 vector. In Fig. 5B, we show that
when anti-HA Ig was used to precipitate HA-USP,
and then anti-GFP was used to probe the pellet, GFP-
dUSP was found inthe pellet only inthe treatment in
which cells were transfected with both GFP-dUSP and
HA-USP. These results indicate that under the condi-
tions of overexpression of dUSP that further aids
JH III in activation ofthe DR1JHECore promoter
(but which does not aid 20OHE activation), dUSP
oligomer (we interpret this to include homodimer)
exists in Sf9 extracts.
Is EcR part ofthe JH III-activation pathway?
The indication that overexpressed USP does not aid
the 20OHE-activation pathway prompted us to exam-
Fig. 5. Immunoprecipitation of USP homodimer. Sf9 cells were transfected withthe indicated expression plasmids. (A) Aliquots from total
cell lysates were loaded directly to SDS ⁄ PAGE for immunoblotting withthe indicated antibody, which confirmed that the GFP-dUSP and
HA-dUSP were expressed inthe cells transfected withthe respective expression plasmid, and as a negative control neither was detected in
cells transfected withthe empty expression plasmid. The upper blot in panel A shows the reactive band for GFP-dUSP present in cells trans-
fected with GFP-dUSP-expressing plasmid and not in cells transfected with empty vector. The lower blot in (A) shows the reactive band for
HA-dUSP present in cells transfected with HA-dUSP-expressing plasmid and not in cells transfected with empty vector. (B) Lysates from
cells transfected withthe indicated plasmid constructs were first immunoprecipitated with anti-HA Ig, andthe immunoprecipitate then sub-
jected to immunoblotting and probing with anti-GFP Ig. The only treatment to yield a 101 kDa corresponding to GFP-dUSP was that for cells
cotransfected with both the plasmids encoding GFP-dUSP and HA-dUSP. This result shows the presence of USP homodimer inthe cell
lysates.
Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling F. Fang et al.
1582 FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS
ine a reciprocal question: whether EcR is participa-
ting inthe JH III alone-activation pathway. As one
approach to this question, we tested the effect of over-
expression of dEcR on the JH III activation pathway.
The pattern observed when dEcR was overexpressed
was the opposite of that observed for the case when
dUSP was overexpressed. As shown in Fig. 4D, as the
amount of plasmid overexpressing EcR was increased
progressively, the fold induction caused by treatment
with 20OHE alone also increased progressively. How-
ever, at the same time, there was no increase in the
level of induction caused by treatment with JH III
alone. This result suggests that the overexpressed level
of EcR does not participate in (does not aid) the path-
way that transduces the USP-dependent transcriptional
activation by JH III alone. This result is particularly
relevant, as it has been well-established that the
EcR-containing receptor complex that transduces
20OHE transcriptional activation in insect cells is the
EcR ⁄ USP complex.
Is the putative USP coactivator surface a part
of the JH activation pathway?
Extensive mutational and cocrystallographic studies on
vertebrate receptors, including human RXR (which is
the ortholog of USP) have shown that an area on the
surface ofthe ligand binding domain involving the
C-terminus of a-helix 3, a-helix 4, andthe N-terminus
of a-helix 5 comprise a surface that is important for
the function ofthe receptor. Conserved in this area
across a wide range of nuclear hormone receptors is a
hydrophobic groove. Depending on the receptor, func-
tions of this region include: (a) binding the a-helix 12
of thereceptor into its own hydrophobic groove [22];
(b) stabilization ofthe a-helix 12 near the hydrophobic
groove in a position that the C-terminus ofthe a-helix
12 will interact withthereceptor dimer partner [23] or
(c) to recruit coactivator ⁄ corepressor proteins to bind
with thereceptor at the hydrophobic groove [24]. In
human RXR, mutation ofthe residue corresponding
to dUSP L314 converts hRXR into a dominant negat-
ive receptor [25]. We therefore mutated this residue
in the dUSP (L314R), and tested its effect to act as
a dominant negative inthe Sf9 cell transfection,
JH III-activation pathway. As shown in Fig. 6, addi-
tion of JH III to Sf9 cells transfected with the
DR1JHECore plasmid resulted in an induction of
promoter activity. However, cotransfection with pro-
gressively greater amounts ofthe mutant L314R
dUSP-expressing plasmid caused a progressive decrease
in the JH III-inducibility ofthe DR1JHECore promo-
ter (Fig. 6, upper panel). To further test whether the
JH III activation pathway requires the presence of the
wild-type L314 USP, cells were transfected with a
dominant-negative acting dose of L314R-expressing
plasmid (that suppressed JH III-activation), but were
also cotransfected with increasing amounts of plasmid
expressing wtUSP. The outcome was that the increas-
ing dose of wtUSP progressively rescued the JH III-
activation ofthe DR1bJHECore promoter (Fig. 6,
lower panel). These results further confirmed the parti-
cipation of wtUSP inthe JH III-activation pathway,
and in particular establish that the wild-type confor-
mation ofthe surface near L314 is necessary for USP
transduction of JH III-activation.
Discussion
Juvenile hormone transcriptional activation
through USP
An important area of investigation inthe mechanisms
of invertebrate hormone action is the identification of
Fig. 6. Role of JH III-activated transcription by hydrophobic residue
(L314) in putative coactivator-binding hydrophobic groove of USP.
(A) Activity of DR1JHECore promoter in Sf9 cells cotransfected
with the indicated increasing concentrations of plasmid expressing
dominant negative L314R mutant dUSP, resulting in increasing sup-
pression of JH III-activation ofthe reporter promoter. (B) Restor-
ation of JH III-activation from the suppressive effects of dominant
negative L314R dUSP, by cotransfection withthe indicated increas-
ing concentrations of plasmid expressing wild-type dUSP.
F. Fang et al. Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling
FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS 1583
specific receptors that can bind and transduce juvenile
hormone signaling for transcriptional activation. Until
recently, identification of a nuclear receptor site of JH
action has been frustratingly difficult. The results of
this study extend our previous findings that indicated
in Sf9 cells JH III(-like) molecules can bind to the
ligand binding pocket of USP, withthe effect of
transcription being activated at the transfected,
DR12JHECore promoter [18,19]. In those previous
studies, mutations to the ligand binding pocket that
weakened JH III binding to USP also acted as domin-
ant negatives inthe USP-dependent, model JH-acti-
vation pathway. In this study, we have used a
DR1JHECore reporter promoter to study JH III signa-
ling through USP. Thus, thetransductionof signaling
for activation ofthe JHECore promoter here is effec-
ted through the DR1 element, which we also demon-
strated by EMSA is a binding site for both purified,
recombinant dUSP and for USP endogenous to nuc-
lear extracts from Sf9 cells.
Receptor complex involved in JH III)20OHE
signaling
The physiological integration ofjuvenile hormone and
20OHE signaling has for several decades been an
underpinning of models for regulation ofthe complex
developmental transition of insect metamorphosis
[26,27], but the molecular mechanisms by which that
integration of signaling may be accomplished has
been frustratingly elusive [28,29]. USP does not bind
20OHE [30–32], andin fact EcR is the only inverteb-
rate nuclear hormone receptor shown to undergo
direct transcriptional activation by 20OHE [33]. It is
thus unlikely that the integration of nuclear JH III
and 20OHE signaling is mediated directly by a USP
homodimer, or by a USP heterodimer with another
partner other than EcR. Przibilla et al. [34] have iden-
tified mutations to USP residues that exert allosteric
effects on the activation ofthe EcR⁄ USP complex by
20-OHE alone, but the operation of JH on that com-
plex was not investigated. Recently, Kethidi et al. [35]
have reported a regulatory element through which JH
signaling suppresses ecdysone activation, but the com-
ponents ofthe complex binding at the element were
not ascertained. Also recently, Dubrovsky et al. [21]
have identified a specific target gene (E75A) for which
ecdysone activation is synergized by JH, but the
direct site of JH action in that synergism was not
reported.
In this study, we have demonstrated the enhanced
activation ofthe JHECore reporter promoter by
cotreatment with JH III (or its metabolite in cultured
Sf9 cells) and 20OHE. This action is mediated through
the DR1 enhancer that we placed 5¢- to the JHECore
promoter. As the EcR ⁄ USP is the direct receptor
target site for 20OHE, then if there is a single DR1-
binding complex that is a target through which JH III
and 20-OHE signaling is integrated, it would be antici-
pated that the complex could be EcR ⁄ USP, because
that complex contains both EcR, the known target of
20OHE, and USP, which we have shown can bind
JH III and transduce JH III-signaling. Overexpressing
dUSP alone causes an increase in activation of the
DR1JHECore (concomitant withthe formation of
dUSP oligomers, such as homodimers) by treatment
with JH III alone. However, the USP ⁄ USP homo-
dimer, by missing the EcR component, does not
enhance the transcriptional activation that is otherwise
observed following cotreatment with 20OHE and
JH III. Reciprocally, intracellular EcR will bind to
direct repeat hormone response elements only as a het-
erodimer with USP, not as an EcR ⁄ EcR homodimer.
Concordantly, when EcR is overexpressed, both the
dEcR and USP in nuclear extracts are inthe complex
that binds to the DR1 motif in EMSA, and this over-
expression of EcR increases the activation of
DR1JHECore by 20OHE. We infer from these results
that the integration of JH III and 20OHE inthe acti-
vation ofthe DR1JHECore promoter reporter in Sf9
cells is mediated through the EcR ⁄ USP complex bind-
ing to the DR1 enhancer.
The transductionof JH III-signaling through USP,
which is increased by overexpression of USP, and the
transduction of 20OHE-signaling through the EcR
component ofthe EcR ⁄ USP heterodimer, prompts a
hypothesis that the enhancement conferred by JH III,
when cells are cotreated with JH III and 20OHE, is
through the USP component ofthe EcR ⁄ USP het-
erodimer. Consistent with that hypothesis is our
observation that the dose-dependence of JH III action
(alone) to activate the DR1JHECore was inthe same
dose range as its effect on transcriptional activation
together with 20OHE. This result indicates that the
site of JH III action for activation of DR1JHECore
(i.e, USP) could be the same site as is involved in the
JH III synergism of 20OHE (i.e. the USP component
of EcR ⁄ USP). Also consistent with that model, we
observed that under conditions of EcR overexpression,
increased 20OHE activation, there exists an EcR ⁄ USP
complex in nuclear extracts that can bind to the
DR1 enhancer, rendering the USP partner available
at the DR1 motif to integrate the JH III-signaling.
We therefore postulate that during the integra-
tion of action of JH III and 20OHE to activate
DR1JHECore transcription in Sf9 cells, the site of
Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling F. Fang et al.
1584 FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS
JH III action is the USP component ofthe USP ⁄ EcR
heterodimer.
Our recent experiments show that transgenic dUSP,
mutated inthe ligand pocket for reduced JH III bind-
ing, is unable to rescue Drosophila melanogaster (null
for USP) from a lethal period from pupariation to
adult emergence, further evidencing that dUSP has an
in vivo ligand binding function (R Thomas, D Jones &
G Jones, unpublished data).
Site of JH action in DR1JHECore activation
by JH III alone
As discussed above, our data indicate that the
increased JH III activation ofthe JHECore by way of
the DR1 motifs (and probably the DR12 motif [18,19])
is through the USP homodimer, or at least not
through USP ⁄ EcR heterodimer. (In preliminary experi-
ments, under similar conditions of cotransfection of
plasmids expressing dUSP and dDRH38, we have not
detected dUSP ⁄ DHR38 heterodimer, and transfection
of dDHR38-expressing plasmid does not increase
JH III-activation ofthe DR1JHECore promoter repor-
ter; F. Fang, Y. Xu, D. Jones and G. Jones, unpub-
lished observation.) Inthe vertebrate system, there is
also recent evidence for the existence of RXR homo-
dimer-dependent pathways that are activated by RXR
ligand [36], including DR1 binding sites [37]. This
model explains the cotransfection results of Baker
et al. [38], who observed that under conditions of EcR
overexpression (which our data suggest would foster
sequestering of USP into an EcR ⁄ USP heterodimer
complex), their cotransfected model promoter respon-
ded to treatment with 20OHE but did not respond to
treatment with JH alone.
Subordination of JH III signaling through USP
to status of EcR activation
There remains the question of why overexpression of
EcR, leading to increased formation of EcR ⁄ USP het-
erodimer, did not yield increased cellular response to
treatment with JH III alone, even though USP is pre-
sent as a potential JH III target inthe EcR ⁄ USP het-
erodimer. There has been considerable controversy in
the vertebrate nuclear receptor field concerning the
mechanistic context of ‘subordination’ of 9-cis RA
signaling through RXR in relation to the particular
RXR heterodimer partner andthe liganded status of
that partner. Some reports have indicated that activa-
tion of RXR by ligand is not permitted by the
heterodimer partner thyroid hormone receptor (VDR),
and thus is a ‘subordinate’ partner to VDR [6]. Other
studies find that RXR inthe RXR ⁄ TR heterodimer
can bind ligand but just not dissociate corepressor
bound to RXR [39], while yet other investigators
adduce the RXR subunit binds ligand but with the
effect to dislodge corepressor from the TR subunit
[40]. The inability ofthe RXR partner to respond
in vivo to RXR ligand when partnered to RAR has
also been taken as evidence that the ligand-dependent
activity of RXR is ’subordinated’ to that of RAR
[41,42]. Evidence has been presented showing the ‘sub-
ordination’ in vivo of RXR to the liganded state of
RAR arises from the inability of RXR ligand to effect
dislodging of corepressor [10]. Inthe RXR ⁄ VDR3 sys-
tem, RXR has been modeled as a nonligand-binding
and therefore silent partner, but a recent report finds
that liganded VDR allosterically modifies the apo-RXR
from an unliganded conformation to a liganded-like
receptor conformation, thus enabling the apo-RXR to
recruit coactivators to itself [43]. Inthe opposite direc-
tion, Willy and Mangelsdorf [44] showed that binding
of agonist by RXR manifests as activated transcription
through the coactivator binding site ofthe LXR part-
ner. In yet another twist, a recent report indicates that
activation of FXR by FXR ligand is suppressed when
the FXR heterodimer partner, RXR, is bound to
agonist [11]. Further complexity exists inthe vertebrate
systems in that different vertebrate isoforms of the
same hormone receptor may respond to ligand differ-
ently with respect to coactivator ⁄ corepressor inter-
action [45].
Under the conditions of our Sf9 cultured cell sys-
tem, exogenous JH III acts through the ligand binding
pocket of USP to activate transcription of the
DR1JHECore. Overexpression of EcR inthe trans-
fected cells results inthe loading ofthe DR1 enhancer
of the DR1JHECore reporter withthe USP⁄ EcR het-
erodimer, at least in EMSA assay with nuclear
extracts from those cells. Yet, despite the presence of
USP inthe heterodimer complex, the DR1JHECore
promoter activity does not further increase in response
to treatment alone withthe USP-agonist JH III,
though it responds quite well to treatment alone with
EcR-agonist 20OHE. The response to JH III under
conditions of EcR ⁄ USP loading on to the DR1
appears to only occur when the EcR partner is ligan-
ded with its cognate hormone, 20OHE. This result
provides evidence that a mechanism of subordination
of the USP response to JH III is operating in the
presence of an unliganded EcR heterodimer partner.
Thus, our study has offered the first invertebrate
model system in which the subordination relationships
can be tested for two identified nuclear receptors for
which an activating ligand is available for each.
F. Fang et al. Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling
FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS 1585
Juvenile hormone transcriptional activation
requires a specific USP surface feature
Our present study found that the transcriptional acti-
vation by USP in response to JH III requires the pres-
ence of wild-type amino acid sequence at the receptor
surface corresponding to the coactivator binding site in
the ortholog RXR. Inthe model vertebrate receptors,
this hydrophobic groove that serves as the binding site
of coactivators when the binding of ligand causes the
a-helix 12 to become repositioned to one edge of this
hydrophobic groove. When USP is concentrated to
10 mgÆmL
)1
(orders of magnitude above physiological
levels) and crystallized with a stabilizing fortuitous
pseudoligand (phospholipid), its a-helix 12 is observed
in an antagonist position covering this groove [46].
Our studies with USP prepared at 200· lower concen-
tration (much closer to physiological levels) have
shown that binding of JH III causes the a-helix 12 to
move in relative position [18]. In this study, we have
observed that the USP mutation L314R converts USP
into a dominant negative mutant ofthe JH-activation
pathway in cultured Sf9 cells. This result is consistent
with a model in which binding of a JH-like ligand to
wild-type USP can cause a-helix 12 to move in such a
way that the surface involving L314 is accessible to
participate inthe JH III-dependent transcriptional acti-
vation mechanism.
Experimental procedures
Chemicals
Juvenile hormone III (75% enantiomeric mixture) was from
Sigma and 20-hydroxy ecdysone was from Sigma (St.
Louis, MO, USA). Each were dissolved as stock in ethanol.
Expression and reporter constructs
The full length coding sequence of Drosophila melanogaster
wild-type USP (dUSP) cloned into the pET32EK vector
(Novagen, Madison, WI, USA), providing for a trx-His-s-
USP fusion protein, and its purification by nickel resin (elu-
tion with imidazole), and then passage ofthe eluted USP
fraction over Superdex 200 resin in 50 mm sodium phos-
phate buffer, have been detailed in Jones et al. [19]. The full
length wild-type dUSP, except for the first 9 amino acids,
and wild-type D. melanogaster EcR (dEcR, isoform A) were
cloned into the PmeI ⁄ NotI sites ofthe pIE1-4 expression
vector. The green fluorescent protein (GFP)-dUSP fusion
protein was prepared in pIE1-4 by subcloning the GFP
coding sequence for into the EcoRI ⁄ SmaI sites ofthe pIE1-
4 vector, upstream ofandinthe same reading frame as
USP. The GFP ‘tag’ provides a total fusion protein size of
101 kDa, which separates it well from the migration on
SDS ⁄ PAGE of wild-type USP or HA-tagged USP. For im-
munoprecipitation experiments, a hemagluttanin (HA)-tag
was placed at the N-terminus ofthe dUSP by cloning a
double-stranded oligomer ofthe following sequence (upper
strand, 5¢-AGCTACCCATACGACGTGCCAGACTACG
CATCTCTG-3¢) into the BamHI site ofthe above pIE1-4
vector already containing the dUSP coding sequence in the
PmeI ⁄ NotI sites. The dUSP mutant L314R was made from
the above wild-type dUSP in pIE1-4, by a QuikChange XL
Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA,
USA) where the sequence ofthe mutation-target primer
was: 5¢-CGACCAGGTGATTCTGagTGAAAGCCGCTT
GGATCG-3¢. Antisense dEcR in pIE1-4 was prepared by
cloning its PCR product with a reverse orientation in the
PmeI ⁄ NotI sites ofthe vector. All constructs were con-
firmed by sequencing. Expression of each receptorin trans-
fected Sf9 cells was confirmed by immunoblotting with
AB11 monoclonal antibody against dUSP (a gift from
F. Kafatos, European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Hei-
delberg, Germany), with monoclonal antibody against the
ecdysone receptor (a gift from R. Evans, Salk Institute,
La Jolla, CA, USA), with rabbit polyclonal antibody
against HA-tag (Abcam Ltd, Cambridge, UK), or with
monoclonal antibody against GFP (Chemicon Interna-
tional, Temecula, CA, USA).
The DR1JHECore promoter reporter construct in pGL3
luciferase reporter vector (Promega, Madison, WI, USA)
was prepared as described in Xu et al. [18]. First, the JHE-
Core promoter ()61 to +28 [17]); was subcloned into the
KpnI ⁄ BglII sites of this reporter vector. An NheI site was
then manufactured immediately 5¢- to the KpnI site. Com-
plementary oligonucleotides encoding a direct repeat motif
(underlined) separated by one base (DR1, 5¢-
AGGTCAA
AGGTCA-3¢) were synthesized with each oligonucleotide
possessing at its 5¢-end the four base overhang of an NheI
restriction site (CTAG). Upon annealing, the double-stran-
ded oligonucleotides would then have a CTAG overhang at
each 5¢-end. The annealed oligonucleotides were then ligated
into concatamers, fractionated by native PAGE andthe gel
fractions corresponding to higher concatamer forms recov-
ered and ligated into the NheI site. In this study we used a
recovered construct containing five tandem DR1 motifs.
The orientation ofthe five DR1 motifs, with ‘fi’ indicating
a single motif ofthe above, upper strand sequence read-
ing toward the downstream JHECore promoter, is
‹fifi‹fi. The IR1JHECore promoter reporter [contain-
ing an inverted repeat (underlined) withthe half sites separ-
ated by one base, IR1] was prepared by the annealing of
single stranded oligomers encoding the sequence (upper
strand) 5¢-CTAGG
AGGTCAATGACCTC-3¢, which is
flanked by an overhang of NheI restriction site, to make an
annealed double-stranded fragment containing an NheI
overhang at each end. The fragment was cloned into the
NheI site ofthe pGL3 luciferase vector described above and
Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling F. Fang et al.
1586 FEBS Journal 272 (2005) 1577–1589 ª 2005 FEBS
[...]... et al Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling a construct containing a single motif inthe fi direction was used in this study Cell culture and transfections Spodoptera frugiperda cell line, Sf9, was maintained and transfected as described previously [19] To study the role of USP in activation ofthe reporter promoter in ligand-treated cells, dUSP cDNA in pIE1-4 and its... 34 35 36 37 38 39 Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling tional ecdysonereceptor is the product of EcR andUltraspiracle genes Nature 366, 476–479 Kapitskaya M, Wang S, Cress DE, Dhadialla TS & Raikhel AS (1996) The mosquito ultraspiracle homologue, a partner of ecdysteroid receptor heterodimer: cloning and characterization of isoforms expressed during vitellogenesis... Interaction ofultraspiracleandecdysonereceptorin hormone signaling 5 Kersten S, Dawson MI, Lewis BA & Noy N (1996) Individual subunits of heterodimers comprised of retinoic acid and retinoid X receptors interact with their ligands independently Biochemistry 35, 3816–3824 6 Thompson PD, Remus LS, Hsieh JC, Jurutka PW, Whitfield GK & Galligan MA, Encinas Dominguez, C, Haussler, CA & Haussler MR (2001) Distinct... observed with such cell line experiments, that the pattern of result for the given ligand was consistent, although the absolute level ofthe corresponding reporter enzyme activity varied from one occasion to the next in relation to the vigor ofthe cell culture at the time Thus, unless otherwise indicated, for each experiment we show a typical result of one ofthe multiple occasions that the experiment... EcR and endogenous USP Thus, transfection of plasmid expressing dEcR and dUSP is assessing the effect ofthe exogenous receptor on the reporter promoter, above and beyond the effect ofthe endogenous receptor Immunoprecipitation assay Sf9 cells were cotransfected with either pIE1-4-dUSP, pIE14-HA-USP, pIE1-4-GFP-USP and ⁄ or pIE1-4-dEcR, as described above Upon harvest of cells, the concentration of. .. cells, the concentration of JH III inthe lysate was maintained at 100 lm during subsequent processing For immunoprecipitation, the lysate was incubated overnight at 4 °C with rabbit polyclonal antibody against HA (Abcam Ltd) The incubate was then precipitated at 4 °C with protein A-Sepharose (Sigma) after another 2 h incubation, the precipitate washed with a washing buffer (50 mm Tris ⁄ acetate, pH... 63–72 1588 F Fang et al 17 Schelling D & Jones G (1995) Functional identification ofthe transcription start site andthe core promoter ofthejuvenile hormone esterase gene in Trichoplusia ni Biochem Biophys Res Commun 214, 286–294 18 Xu Y, Fang F, Chu Y, Jones D & Jones G (2003) Activation of transcription through the ligand-binding pocket ofthe orphan nuclear receptorultraspiracle Eur J Biochem 269,... with Sf9 nuclear extracts, except that 10 lg of nuclear extract were used andthe dIdC was titrated to an optimum, depending on the particular nuclear extract preparation, and that in some assays there was included a monoclonal antibody against dEcR, or a monoclonal antibody against dUSP or a monoclonal antibody against the unrelated protein ELAV [47] The antibody was added 30 min before addition of. .. was incubated with horseradish peroxidase-labelled anti-mouse (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA) secondary Ig, and then developed, as described by [18] Electrophoretic mobility shift assay The double-stranded probe containing a single DR1 motif (5¢-AGGTCAAAGGTCA- 3¢) was end-labeled with 32P, and used in gel-shift assay to test for specific binding by either purified recombinant dUSP, or by components of Sf9... recruitment andthe mechanism of retinoic acid receptor synergy Nature 415, 187–192 11 Kassam A, Miao B, Young PR & Mukherjee R (2003) Retinoid X receptor (RXR) agonist-induced antagonism of farnesoid X receptor (FXR) activity due to absence of coactivator recruitment and decreased DNA binding J Biol Chem 278, 10028–10032 12 Benson S, Padmanabhan S, Kurtz TW & Pershadsingh HA (2000) Ligands for the peroxisome . Interactions of ultraspiracle with ecdysone receptor in the
transduction of ecdysone- and juvenile hormone-signaling
Fang Fang
2
, Yong. shown that an area on the
surface of the ligand binding domain involving the
C-terminus of a-helix 3, a-helix 4, and the N-terminus
of a-helix 5 comprise