Steroid hormones, endometrial gene regulation and the Sp1 family of proteins

2002 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 329-334 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Krikun
1997 ◽  
pp. 127-144
Author(s):  
Miguel Beato ◽  
Sebastián Chávez ◽  
Karin Eisfeld ◽  
Christian Spangenberg ◽  
Mathias Truss

2020 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. T65-T79
Author(s):  
Miguel Beato ◽  
Roni H G Wright ◽  
François Le Dily

Gene regulation by steroid hormones has been at the forefront in elucidating the intricacies of transcriptional regulation in eukaryotes ever since the discovery by Karlson and Clever that the insect steroid hormone ecdysone induces chromatin puffs in giant chromosomes. After the successful cloning of the hormone receptors toward the end of the past century, detailed mechanistic insight emerged in some model systems, in particular the MMTV provirus. With the arrival of next generation DNA sequencing and the omics techniques, we have gained even further insight into the global cellular response to steroid hormones that in the past decades also extended to the function of the 3D genome topology. More recently, advances in high resolution microcopy, single cell genomics and the new vision of liquid-liquid phase transitions in the context of nuclear space bring us closer than ever to unravelling the logic of gene regulation and its complex integration of global cellular signaling networks. Using the function of progesterone and its cellular receptor in breast cancer cells, we will briefly summarize the history and describe the present extent of our knowledge on how regulatory proteins deal with the chromatin structure to gain access to DNA sequences and interpret the genomic instructions that enable cells to respond selectively to external signals by reshaping their gene regulatory networks.


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