Ligand Binding Shifts Highly Mobile Retinoid X Receptor to the Chromatin-Bound State in a Coactivator-Dependent Manner, as Revealed by Single-Cell Imaging

Author:

Brazda Peter12,Krieger Jan3,Daniel Bence1,Jonas David12,Szekeres Tibor4,Langowski Jörg3,Tóth Katalin3,Nagy Laszlo12,Vámosi György4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Research Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Debrecen, Faculty of Medicine, Debrecen, Hungary

2. MTA-DE Lendület Immunogenomics Research Group, Research Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Debrecen, Faculty of Medicine, Debrecen, Hungary

3. German Cancer Research Center, Division Biophysics of Macromolecules, Heidelberg, Germany

4. Department of Biophysics and Cell Biology, Research Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Debrecen, Faculty of Medicine, Debrecen, Hungary

Abstract

ABSTRACT Retinoid X receptor (RXR) is a promiscuous nuclear receptor forming heterodimers with several other receptors, which activate different sets of genes. Upon agonist treatment, the occupancy of its genomic binding regions increased, but only a modest change in the number of sites was revealed by chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing, suggesting a rather static behavior. However, such genome-wide and biochemical approaches do not take into account the dynamic behavior of a transcription factor. Therefore, we characterized the nuclear dynamics of RXR during activation in single cells on the subsecond scale using live-cell imaging. By applying fluorescence recovery after photobleaching and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS), techniques with different temporal and spatial resolutions, a highly dynamic behavior could be uncovered which is best described by a two-state model (slow and fast) of receptor mobility. In the unliganded state, most RXRs belonged to the fast population, leaving ∼15% for the slow, chromatin-bound fraction. Upon agonist treatment, this ratio increased to ∼43% as a result of an immediate and reversible redistribution. Coactivator binding appears to be indispensable for redistribution and has a major contribution to chromatin association. A nuclear mobility map recorded by light sheet microscopy-FCS shows that the ligand-induced transition from the fast to the slow population occurs throughout the nucleus. Our results support a model in which RXR has a distinct, highly dynamic nuclear behavior and follows hit-and-run kinetics upon activation.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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