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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Disrupting Sumoylation Enhances Transcriptional Function And Ameliorates Polyglutamine Androgen Receptor-Mediated Disease., Jason P Chua, Satya L Reddy, Zhigang Yu, Elisa Giorgetti, Heather L Montie, Sarmistha Mukherjee, Jake Higgins, Richard C Mceachin, Diane M Robins, Diane E Merry, Jorge A Iñiguez-Lluhí, Andrew P Lieberman
Disrupting Sumoylation Enhances Transcriptional Function And Ameliorates Polyglutamine Androgen Receptor-Mediated Disease., Jason P Chua, Satya L Reddy, Zhigang Yu, Elisa Giorgetti, Heather L Montie, Sarmistha Mukherjee, Jake Higgins, Richard C Mceachin, Diane M Robins, Diane E Merry, Jorge A Iñiguez-Lluhí, Andrew P Lieberman
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Faculty Papers
Expansion of the polyglutamine (polyQ) tract within the androgen receptor (AR) causes neuromuscular degeneration in individuals with spinobulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA). PolyQ AR has diminished transcriptional function and exhibits ligand-dependent proteotoxicity, features that have both been implicated in SBMA; however, the extent to which altered AR transcriptional function contributes to pathogenesis remains controversial. Here, we sought to dissociate effects of diminished AR function from polyQ-mediated proteotoxicity by enhancing the transcriptional activity of polyQ AR. To accomplish this, we bypassed the inhibitory effect of AR SUMOylation (where SUMO indicates small ubiquitin-like modifier) by mutating conserved lysines in the polyQ AR that …