Glucocorticoid-induced phosphorylation by CDK9 modulates the coactivator functions of transcriptional cofactor GRIP1 in macrophages. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The glucocorticoid (GC) receptor (GR) suppresses inflammation by activating anti-inflammatory and repressing pro-inflammatory genes. GR-interacting protein-1 (GRIP1) is a GR corepressor in macrophages, however, whether GRIP1 mediates GR-activated transcription, and what dictates its coactivator versus corepressor properties is unknown. Here we report that GRIP1 loss in macrophages attenuates glucocorticoid induction of several anti-inflammatory targets, and that GC treatment of quiescent macrophages globally directs GRIP1 toward GR binding sites dominated by palindromic GC response elements (GRE), suggesting a non-redundant GRIP1 function as a GR coactivator. Interestingly, GRIP1 is phosphorylated at an N-terminal serine cluster by cyclin-dependent kinase-9 (CDK9), which is recruited into GC-induced GR:GRIP1:CDK9 hetero-complexes, producing distinct GRE-specific GRIP1 phospho-isoforms. Phosphorylation potentiates GRIP1 coactivator but, remarkably, not its corepressor properties. Consistently, phospho-GRIP1 and CDK9 are not detected at GR transrepression sites near pro-inflammatory genes. Thus, GR restricts actions of its own coregulator via CDK9-mediated phosphorylation to a subset of anti-inflammatory genes.

publication date

  • November 23, 2017

Research

keywords

  • Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing
  • Carrier Proteins
  • Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 9
  • Glucocorticoids
  • Macrophages
  • Nerve Tissue Proteins

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC5700924

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85034848752

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/s41467-017-01569-2

PubMed ID

  • 29170386

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 8

issue

  • 1