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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Molecular analysis of normal and mutant forms of the androgen receptor and their interactive properties

Panet-Raymond, Valerie. January 1999 (has links)
The androgen receptor (AR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor and a member of the nuclear receptor superfamily. Mutations in the androgen receptor are associated with androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS), and a neurodegenerative disease, spinal bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA). Most of the mutations causing AIS are loss-of-function missense mutations whereas SBMA is caused by a gain-of-function polyglutamine expansion in the N-terminal domain of the protein. Characterization of AR mutations has led to a better understanding of structure-function relationships of the AR and serves as a prototype for steroid receptors mechanisms of action. / In the first paper, we examine the role of an AR mutation in causing mild androgen insensitivity syndrome. We found that this mutation conferred reduced transactivation by AR through impaired interactions with the AR coactivator, TIF2, and impaired homodimerization. / In the second paper, we investigate the role of the AR polyGln expansion mutation in SBMA pathogenesis. Recent evidence has implicated proteolytic degradation of polyGln-expanded proteins and their subsequent intracellular aggregation in polyGn-expanded disease pathogenesis. We examined the role and composition of aggregates using fluorescently-tagged AR and found that proteolysis need not be a prerequisite for aggregation and that aggregation is not necessary for poly-Gln-induced cellular toxicity. / Finally, we characterize the novel heterodimerization of AR and ERalpha. We determined that this direct interaction has functional implications for the transactivational properties of both receptors.
12

Molecular analysis of normal and mutant forms of the androgen receptor and their interactive properties

Panet-Raymond, Valerie. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
13

Biochemical and molecular genetic analysis of mutant androgen receptors in humans

Mhatre, Anand N. January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
14

Extracellular signal regulated kinase/mitogen activated protein kinase (ERK/MAPK) regulation of the androgen receptor in breast cancer cells

Azzam, Diana Galil January 2008 (has links)
[Truncated abstract] Androgens inhibit the growth of human breast tumours and have been successfully used to treat breast cancer in women. Expression of the androgen receptor (AR), which mediates androgen action, is upregulated in breast cancer cells and the AR is the most frequently expressed steroid hormone receptor in breast tumours. AR levels and activity are modulated by the activity of other signalling pathways, however interactions between the AR and signalling pathways and the consequent alterations to the androgen responsiveness of breast cancer cells are largely uncharacterised. The extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK1/2) pathway is hyperactivated in ~30% of breast tumours and these tumours are often associated with low oestrogen receptor-a (ERa) levels, reduced responsiveness to antioestrogen therapies and an overall poorer prognosis. In this thesis, the MCF-7 human breast cancer cell line which expresses ERa, progesterone receptor (PR) and the AR, was used to investigate ERK1/2-mediated regulation of the AR and the androgen responsiveness of cells. Inhibition of ERK1/2 signalling was achieved by treatment of cells with U0126, an inhibitor of MEK1/2, the upstream activator of ERK1/2. Hyperactivation of ERK1/2 signalling was achieved by stably transfecting cells with a plasmid encoding a constitutively active form of the MEK1 protein (¿MEK1), resulting in the isolation of two clonal cell populations stably expressing ¿MEK1, ¿C3 and ¿6B, and a monoclonal cell line stably expressing the empty vector, MT3-1. Steady state AR mRNA levels, quantitated using real-time RT-PCR, were increased following U0126 treatment of MCF-7, MT3-1 and ¿6B cells. Conversely, treatment of cells with 10-8M 5a-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) for up to 72 hours decreased AR mRNA levels, indicating that ERK1/2 hyperactivation did not alter the androgenresponsiveness of AR mRNA. '...' Overall levels of AR phosphorylation were enhanced in ¿6B cells in the absence and presence of ligand, indicating that ERK1/2 hyperactivation either directly or indirectly induced receptor phosphorylation. The AR is localised in the cytoplasm in the absence of ligand and was more rapidly translocated to the nucleus in the presence of DHT in ¿C3 cells, an effect that was abrogated in the presence of U0126, thereby indicating an ERK1/2-specific mechanism. AR transcriptional activity, measured using androgen responsive reporter plasmids was not significantly altered in ¿6B cells in either the absence or presence of DHT, although the trend towards enhanced AR activity may be confirmed in future studies using optimised reporter assays. Consistent with the cell cycle regulatory functions of ERK1/2 signalling, proliferation of ¿C3 cells and ¿6B cells was increased in comparison to that of MT3-1 and MCF-7 cells. Treatment of ¿C3 cells and MCF-7 cells with 10-10 – 10-8M DHT produced similar inhibition of proliferation (~40%) during 8 days of culture, with no evidence of cytotoxicity. The results obtained in this thesis demonstrate that while ERK1/2 signalling regulates AR phosphorylation, processing and intracellular localisation, ERK1/2 hyperactivation in breast cancer cells does not inhibit the anti-proliferative effects of androgens. These findings support the development of tissue-specific androgenic treatments for breast tumours including poor prognosis tumours exhibiting ERK1/2 hyperactivation.
15

Effects of mutant human androgen receptor with expanded CAG repeats onmuscle cells

羅興怡, Law, Hing-yee. January 2001 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Paediatrics / Master / Master of Philosophy
16

Molecular genetic analysis of receptor-defective androgen resistance in man

Prior, Lynn January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
17

Structure-function analysis of three widely dispersed point mutations in the hormone-binding domain of the androgen receptor

Sabbaghian, Nelly January 1994 (has links)
Three point mutations have been found in the hormone-binding domain (HBD) of the human androgen receptor (hAR): one in the N-terminal end (Ile663Asn in a family with partial androgen insensitivity syndrome (PAIS)); one in the middle, (Leu820Val in a family with PAIS); and one in the C-terminal end (Pro903Ser, in a family with complete AIS). The positions 663 and 903 were the most terminal mutation sites in the HBD found to date. The three mutant hARs have been previously characterized biochemically in genital skin fibroblasts. In the family with the Leu820Val substitution, the mother and the grandmother were found to be carriers for the same mutation. To prove their pathogenicity, each of the three mutations has been reproduced in an hAR expression vector that was transfected into COS-1 cells. In COS-1 cells, the complexes from Pro903Ser and Leu820Val had: increased thermolability; increased dissociation rates; decreased affinity; and abnormal transactivation. There was a hierarchy in the severity of the mutations expressed in kinetic and transactivation assays that correlated with the severity of the clinical phenotype. The pathogenicity of the Pro903Ser and the Leu820Val mutations was thereby confirmed. In COS-1 cells, the AR with Ile663Asn had normal thermolability, normal dissociation rates, and normal transactivation, but a decreased affinity. Although this sequence alteration has only been found in a PAIS patient, its pathogenicity is not considered to be proven. More sensitive assays are needed for this purpose.
18

Analysis of exon 1 and the 5'-flanking region of the androgen receptor gene in subjects with androgen insensitivity syndrome

Vasiliou, Denise Marie. January 1996 (has links)
The human androgen receptor (hAR) is a ligand-activated, nuclear transcription factor. Mutations affecting the formation and/or action of the hAR cause androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS). The majority of mutations identified to date are within the DNA- and hormone-binding domains; very few have been identified in the transactivational modulatory domain, encoded by exon 1. This work presents an analysis of exon 1 and the 5$ sp prime$-flanking region of the hAR in a set of subjects whose AIS was believed to be caused by a mutation within these regions. Six of twelve strains had a nonsense or frameshift mutation in exon 1; a seventh strain had two missense and one silent substitution; no mutations were identified in the remaining subjects. The two missense mutations were recreated, individually and together, in an hAR complementary DNA (cDNA) expression vector and expressed in heterologous COS-1 cells. Their pathogenicity could not be proven with the system and assays used. In addition, mRNA and protein levels were analyzed and correlated with the identified mutations and the subjects' phenotype.
19

Functional analysis of the human androgen receptor using synthetic and naturally occurring mutations

Kazemi-Esfarjani, Parsa. January 1996 (has links)
The human androgen receptor (hAR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor, and like other nuclear receptors, consists of a N-terminal modulatory domain, a central DNA-binding domain, and a C-terminal ligand-binding domain (LBD). Several missense mutations in the LBD cause androgen insensitivity syndrome (AI), a condition in XY individuals with absent or subnormal male primary and secondary sexual characteristics. On the other hand, abnormal expansion of a polyglutamine tract in the N-terminal domain of the hAR causes spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) which also affects males and causes milder forms of AI, in addition to adult-onset motor neuron degeneration and gradual wasting and weakening of the muscles of the limbs, face, throat, and tongue. However, it was not clear how and to what extent these mutations contribute to the clinical phenotype of the affected individuals. In order to investigate this matter, I used PCR site-directed mutagenesis to create plasmids expressing hARs with two pairs of missense mutations in the LBD (Val865Leu and Val865Met, and Arg839His and Arg839Cys), discovered in AI individuals with varying severity of the phenotype, and two abnormal expansions of the polyglutamine repeat discovered in SBMA patients (40 and 50 glutamines). I also synthesized plasmids expressing no glutamines (0 glutamines), 12 glutamines, or 20 glutamines in the same N-terminal region of the hAR. These plasmids were transiently expressed in heterologous cells (COS-1 and PC-3), and the mutant hARs were assayed for ligand binding, stability, and transactivational capacity. / In contrast to the findings by others (McPhaul et al., 1992; Marcelli et al., 1994), in some instances involving identical mutations, I consistently observed a correlation between the biochemical phenotype of the mutant hARs and the clinical phenotype of AI individuals; that is, the more severe receptor phenotype was associated with the more severe AI. These results support the hypothesis that hAR phenotype is the dominant factor in the development of the secondary sexual characteristics in normal and affected individuals. / I also observed a tight negative correlation between polyglutamine tract length and transactivational capacity. This suggests that polyglutamine modulates the activity of the hAR, and that hAR activity might be suppressed in various androgen-sensitive tissues (including motor neurons) in SBMA individuals, thereby contributing to the age of onset and/or progression of the disease, even if it cannot be the primary pathogenic agent of the disease.
20

Biochemical and molecular genetic analysis of mutant androgen receptors in humans

Mhatre, Anand N. January 1992 (has links)
The major objective of this thesis was to determine the molecular basis of a "ligand-selective" mutant androgen receptor (AR) phenotype. Methyltrienelone (MT), a synthetic androgen, dissociates normally from this receptor but mibolerone (MB), another synthetic androgen, dissociates from it two-fold faster than normal. This mutant receptor was identified within genital skin fibroblasts (GSF) from two unrelated individuals with different degrees of androgen insensitivity (AI). Sequence analysis of the AR gene from both subjects revealed a G to A transition at nt 2969 in exon 6 that alters codon 813 from serine to asparagine (S813N). Transiently expressed hAR.S813N did not reproduce the mutant phenotype in several heterologous cells: COS-1, BHK, CHO or HeLa cells. In contrast, when AR free (R$ sp-$) GSF were used as host cells, MB-R.S813N complexes dissociated almost two fold faster than the controls (n = 4) while MT-R.S813N complexes dissociated normally. These results establish the G to A transition at nt 2969 as the cause of the ligand-selective phenotype. Such host-cell restricted expression of the mutant dissociation rate points to cell-specific factors that can suppress abnormal dissociation of A-R complexes. Host cell-restricted expression of the abnormal dissociation rates has also been observed for two other transiently expressed mutant AR, hAR.V865L and hAR.R839H (n = 3). / Expansion of the glutamine (gln) tract within the N-terminus of the AR causes spinal bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), a disease of motor neurons, but the mechanism of this neuropathology is unknown. To determine the effect of gln-tract expansion upon AR function, SBMA-associated mutant AR was transiently expressed and characterized in COS-1 cells. The androgen-binding parameters of the mutant receptor were normal, but it had decreased transactivation competence (50-66% of normal; n = 3). This abnormal transregulatory function may account for the expression of traits associated with minimal androgen insensitivity (MAI) that are variably expressed in the SBMA patients.

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