The receptor is a non-covalent heterodimer of two proteins, the EcR protein and ultraspiracle protein (USP). These nuclear hormone receptor proteins are the insect orthologs of the mammalianfarnesoid X receptor (FXR) and retinoid X receptor (RXR) proteins, respectively. Based on sequence homology considerations,[6] some researchers reserve the term USP for the EcR partner from lepidopteran and dipteran insects, and use RXR in all other instances.
EcR and USP share the multi-domain architecture common to all nuclear hormone receptors, namely an N-terminaltranscriptional activation domain (A/B domain), a DNA-binding domain (C domain, highly conserved between receptors), a linker region (D region), a ligand-binding domain (E domain, moderately conserved), and in some cases a distinct C-terminal extension (F-domain).[7] The DNA-binding domains of EcR and USP recognise specific short sequences in DNA, and mediate the binding of the heterodimer to these ecdysone response elements (ECREs) in the promoters of ecdysone-responsive genes.
The ecdysteroid-binding pocket is located in the ligand binding domain of the EcR subunit, but EcR must be dimerised with a USP (or with an RXR) for high-affinity ligand binding to occur. In such circumstances, the binding of an agonist ligand triggers a conformational change in the C-terminal part of the EcR ligand-binding domain that leads to transcriptional activation of genes under ECRE control.[8] There is also a ligand-binding pocket in the corresponding domain of USP. Its natural ligand remains uncertain, and USPs appear to be locked permanently in an inactive conformation.[9]
X-ray crystalstructures have been determined for several heterodimeric DNA-binding domains[10] and ligand-binding domains from ecdysone receptors.
Commercial applications
Ecdysone receptors have two main fields of application:
^Dhadialla TS, Carlson GR, Le DP (1998). "New insecticides with ecdysteroidal and juvenile hormone activity". Annu. Rev. Entomol. 43: 545–69. doi:10.1146/annurev.ento.43.1.545. PMID9444757.
^Dhadialla TS, Retnakaran A, Smagghe G (2005). "Insect growth- and development-disrupting insecticides". In Sarjeet S. Gill, Gilbert, Lawrence I., Kostas Iatrou (eds.). Comprehensive molecular insect science. Amsterdam: Elsevier. pp. 55–115. ISBN0-444-51516-X.
External links
PDB representative structures of ecdysone receptor ligand binding domains:
1R1K, ligand-binding domain heterodimer of Heliothis viresecens in complex with an ecdysteroid; 1R20, the same heterodimer in complex with a dibenzoylhydrazine agonist.