Guest guest Posted March 10, 2003 Report Share Posted March 10, 2003 I thought some of you might be interested is this article that was on one of the CFS lists. A possible mechanism for the thyroid problems that many develop. Cheryl Source: Medical Hypotheses Volume 60, Issue 2, Pages 175-180 Date: February 2003, Pages 175-180 URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03069877 Type I interferons induce proteins susceptible to act as thyroid receptor (TR) corepressors and to signal the TR for destruction by the proteasome: possible etiology for unexplained chronic fatigue ------------------------------------------------------------------ P. Englebienne(Corresponding Author), M. Verhas, C. V. Herst and K. De Meirleir University of Brussels (ULB/VUB), and RED Laboratories, N.V., Brussels, Belgium Correspondence to: P. Englebienne PhD, Department of Nuclear Medicine and Fatigue Clinic, Free University of Brussels (ULB/VUB), Brugmann Hospital, Place van Gehuchten 4, B-1020 Brussels, Belgium. Phone: +32-2-477-2651; Fax: +32-2-477-2432, E-mail: penglebi@... Received 23 November 2001; accepted 8 May 2002.; Available online 10 December 2002. Abstract In some patients complaining of chronic fatigue such as those suffering from the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), no underlying physical cause can be clearly identified and they typically present a normal thyroid function. Several studies indicate a dysregulation in the type I interferons (IFN-alpha/beta) pathway in CFS resulting in a sustained upregulation of 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetases (2-5OAS). Likewise, patients treated with IFN-alpha/beta usually complain of severe fatigue as a limiting side effect. Beside the 2-5OAS, IFN-alpha/beta induce also the expression of three closely related proteins of unknown function termed the 2-5OAS-like (2-5OASL) proteins. The amino acid sequences of the 2-5OASL proteins display 96% identity with the partial sequence of the thyroid receptor interacting protein (TRIP) 14, further contain two typical thyroid hormone receptor (TR) coregulator domains and feature two ubiquitin C-terminal domains. >From these observations, we raise the hypothesis that the 2-5OASL proteins are TRIPs capable of, respectively, repressing TR transactivation and/or signaling the receptor for destruction by the proteasome. Such molecular mechanisms could explain the development of a clinical hypothyroid state in presence of a normal thyroid function. Hypothesis Thyroid hormones (T3) play important roles in metabolism and are required for the normal function of nearly all tissues, with major effects on oxygen consumption and metabolic rate [1]. Consequently, chronic fatigue is the hallmark symptom of primary or secondary hypothyroidism. In these clearly defined clinical situations, abnormalities in the hypothalamicpituitary-thyroid axis explain the disorders. In some less well-defined clinical situations such as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), the hallmark symptom, i.e., severe chronic fatigue, is not supported by any objective biochemical origin and the syndrome is diagnosed by exclusion [2]. Whilst biochemically euthyroid, CFS patients are clinically hypothyroid [3] and some clinicians have even advocated T3 therapy [4] which was forcefully controversed [5]. The presence of a dysregulation in the type I interferon (IFN- small alpha/beta) antiviral pathway in CFS has been repeatedly observed [6 and 7], which involves the upregulation of 2',5'-oligoadenylate synthetase (2-5OAS) [8]. Interestingly, severe chronic fatigue is the major adverse side-effect experienced by patients, respectively, treated with IFN-alpha/beta for cancer [9], chronic hepatitis C [10], or multiple sclerosis [11]. Although there is some evidence that systemic IFN-alpha/beta therapy induces hormonal deficiency syndromes, they do not explain the occurrence of fatigue in all patients [12]. This parallelism leads us to raise the hypothesis that a cross-talk takes place between the interferon antiviral pathway and transcription mechanisms by the thyroid hormone receptor (TR). This cross-talk could be mediated by 2-5OAS-like proteins (2-5OASL), also induced by IFN-alpha/beta, and susceptible to repress transactivation of the TR and/or of targeting the receptor for destruction by the proteasome. If verified, these signal transduction mechanisms could be accounted for a peripheral T3 resistance syndrome leading to a clinically hypothyroid but biochemically euthyroid state, as observed in diseases characterized by dysregulations in the antiviral pathway or during the therapeutic use of INF-alpha/beta. Elements supporting the hypothesis THE 2-5OASL BUT NOT THE 2-5OAS PROTEINS SHARE SEQUENCE IDENTITY WITH THE THYROID HORMONE RECEPTOR INTERACTING PROTEIN (TRIP) 14 Type I interferons induce the expression of ubiquitous proteins of the 2-5OAS family. This family encompasses the three 2-5OAS enzymes (p41/46, p69/71, and p100) [13] along with three recently identified 2-5OASL proteins, respectively, p30, p56, and p59 [14 and 15]. The amino acid (aa) sequences of all the proteins within the family share a high degree of similarity amounting up to 43%. However, the C-terminal part of p56 and p59 2-5OASL extends by another 150 residues beyond the sequences of the three 2-5OAS and of the p30 2-5OASL. The genes coding for 2-5OAS proteins are found on chromosome 12q24.1, although the genes coding for the 2-5OASL proteins have been mapped to chromosome 12q24.2 [16]. It has been suggested that the expansion of the 2-5OAS gene family occurred by duplication of an ancestral gene, followed by domain coupling and chromosomal segment duplication [16]. The role of 2-5OAS proteins is well established. They polymerize ATP into 2',5'-oligoadenylates which subsequently activate ribonuclease L, resulting in a general RNA degradation [17]. Using the ClustalW program [18], we aligned the catalytic site of 2-5OAS with the corresponding region of 2-5OASL. This alignment shows that the critical Lys residue of 2-5OAS P-loop is substituted by an Asn in 2-5OASL and that the three Asp residues which are required for the catalytic activity of 2-5OAS [19] are, respectively, substituted by Glu and Thr residues in the 2-5OASL proteins. Despite the high degree of identity between the sequences within this domain, these subtle differences explain the lack of enzymatic activity of the 2-5OASL proteins [14], the physiological role of which has so far remained elusive [15]. Interestingly, a BLAST search [20] performed at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) using the p56 OASL sequence as the template reveals 96% identity with the partial sequence (153 amino acids) of TRIP 14 (accession gi703104). This protein was identified as interacting with the thyroid hormone receptor (TR) using the yeast two-hybrid system [21]. The interaction was observed in cells grown in the absence of thyroid hormone, but not in cells grown in presence of the hormone. As shown in Fig. 1, the sequence alignment of TRIP14 with the three 2-5OAS and p56/59 2-5OASL proteins (the TRIP14 sequence fragment is upstream to the p30 OASL C-terminal sequence) indicates a much lower degree of identity with the 2-5OAS enzymes, suggesting that the members of the family could have, respectively, differentiated as enzymes (2-5OAS) at the one hand and TRIPs (2-5OASL) at the other hand. THE 2-5OASL PROTEINS COULD INTERACT WITH UNLIGANDED TR AS COREPRESSORS THROUGH THE SPECIFIC PHI XX PHI PHI MOTIF The TR regulates target gene expression directly through DNA T3 response elements (TREs). The TR can interact with TREs as an homodimer but the major form of TR bound to TREs is the heterodimer with the retinoid X receptor (RXR) [22]. Transcriptional activation of liganded TR is mediated by coactivator proteins that associate with the receptors in a ligand-dependent manner and repression is mediated by the association of the unliganded receptors with corepressor proteins. The coactivator proteins interact with TR and RXR receptors through conserved hydrophobic Phi xx Phi Phi (x stands for any aa) motifs made of a LeuxxLeu/IleLeu pattern [23 and 24]. Two such receptor-binding domains (RBD) are required, each interacting with one receptor of the heterodimeric complex [25]. From the N-terminus of coactivator proteins, RBD1 displays preference for RXR, and RBD2 exhibits a strong preference for TR [25] resulting from the presence of basic/polar residues downstream to the Phi xx Phi Phi motif. The corepressor proteins interact with unliganded receptors through an homologous hydrophobic core motif containing the Ile/LeuxxIleIle pattern [26] and the specificity of their interaction with TR is likewise governed by distinct aa sequences within the interacting domains [27]. The distinction between coactivators and corepressors is likely to be governed by the nature of the nine aa upstream to the Phi xx Phi Phi motif since chimeric peptide made of the coactivator motif in which these nine aa are replaced by those of a corepressor interact with TR in a ligand-independent manner [28]. The 2-5OASL proteins contain the hydrophobic core motif and its alignment ( Fig. 2) with the corresponding sequences of the RBD2 of the human TR corepressor Alien [29] and of the coactivator TRAP220 [30] indicates that the 2-5OASL motif is very similar to that of the corepressor. The similarity is particularly remarkable in the sequence upstream to the hydrophobic core motif. Consequently, that observation leads us to argue that the 2-5OASL proteins could interact as possible corepressors with TR in a ligand-independent manner [21] through the conserved hydrophobic core motif present in their aa sequence. THE 2-5OASL PROTEINS COULD ALSO INTERACT WITH TR/RXR THROUGH AN ADDITIONAL SCAN DOMAIN In order to interact with either TR/TR homodimers or TR/RXR heterodimers, corepressors and coactivators aa sequences must contain at least twice the Phi xx Phi Phi motif, which is not the case in the 2-5OASL proteins. Consequently, we examined further the sequence of the 2-5OASL proteins with an aim at identifying other possible interacting domains. As shown in Fig. 3, we identified a strong homology with the consensus sequence of the SCAN domain [31] in the N-terminal sequence of the 2-5OASL proteins. In particular, the 2-5OASL proteins retain most of the conserved residues of the SCAN proteins which are relevant characteristics of the domain [31], including the central GlnTrpLeuxPro and Leux6Leu motifs flanked by Asp, Glu, Leu, and His residues. This homology is much less matched by the corresponding sequences of the 2-5OAS proteins which do not contain the characteristic motifs. The SCAN domain is a highly conserved Leu-rich motif of approximately 60 aa originally found at the N-terminal end of Cys2His2 zinc finger transcription factors and more recently identified also in proteins devoid of zinc fingers [32], such as the 2-5OASL. The SCAN domain of these latter proteins, even partial, mediates their oligomerization with zinc finger transcription factors of the Cys2Cys2 type such as the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma TR-sbeta and the estrogen receptor-alpha [33]. These observations consequently suggest that the three 2-5OASL proteins could bind the second nuclear receptor in the homo- or hetero-dimer through their SCAN domain. P56/59 2-5OASL PROTEINS CONTAIN TWO UBIQUITIN DOMAINS THROUGH WHICH THEY COULD SIGNAL THE TR FOR DESTRUCTION BY THE PROTEASOME Finally, an e-motif search [34] allowed us to identify two ubiquitin (Ub) domains in the C-terminal part of p56 and p59 2-5OASL sequences ( Fig. 4). Domain 1 displays a strong conserved identity with the Ub consensus and domain 2 contains two clear overlapping Ub signatures. The Ub system targets proteins for proteolytic degradation by the 26S proteasome [35]. Ub-mediated degradation of cellular proteins occurs in both the cytosol and the nucleus and plays important roles in the regulation of cell-cycle progression, signal transduction, transcriptional regulation, and endocytosis [35 and 36]. Ub is a small 76-aa protein which is covalently attached as a polymeric chain to the target substrate. The normal process involves three steps, namely Ub activation by E1 enzymes, transport and finally ligation by Ub-ligases to the target substrate [36]. Alternatively, the second step is skipped provided that a polyUb chain is already anchored to the protein substrate [36]. This latter scenario could be retained in the present case since we have shown above that the p56/59 2-5OASL can bind the TR and RXR through their Phi xx Phi Phi and SCAN domains. Activation of Ub for covalent attachment involves the cleavage of a C-terminal GlyGly dipeptide. Albeit rich in Gly residues, the C-terminus of the p56/59 OASL is devoid of such dipeptide (Fig. 4). Intriguingly, IFN-alpha/beta induce also the expression of an Ub homolog (UCRP) which is activated by E1 enzymes in a way involving different, yet unidentified C-terminal residues [37]. The absence of the GlyGly dipeptide in the C-terminal part of the p56/59 OASL consequently does not necessarily precludes its activation for covalent attachment to the TR/RXR by an Ub-ligase. In order to attach Ub, the Ub-ligases bind the substrate on its N-terminus. They contain two distinct sites that recognize either basic or bulky-hydrophobic residues [36]. Although the N-terminus of the TR-alpha isoforms is rich in basic residues (approximately 30%), TR-beta and the RXR-alpha/beta and gamma forms contain bulk hydrophobic motifs (i.a. ValxProAlaAla, AlaAlaxProProPhe, and PheMetxPheProAla). Consequently, all the members of this receptor family contain recruitment sites for Ub-ligases and the presence of a polyUb-like protein bound to their complexes may signal them for destruction by the proteasome. Proposed mechanisms for induction of T3 resistance by the 2-5OASL proteins As depicted schematically in Fig. 5A, the unliganded TR/RXR heterodimer could interact with the p30 OASL, which contains both the SCAN and Phi xx Phi Phi motifs but is devoid of Ub homology. Due to the presence upstream to the Phi xx Phi Phi motif of an aa stretch analogous to the corresponding corepressor sequence, the complex could activate the histone deacetylases which mediate TR repression [22]. Similarly, the TR/RXR unliganded complex could also interact with the p56/p59 OASL proteins through the same SCAN and Phi xx Phi Phi motifs (Fig. 5B). Moreover, these latter proteins contain two Ub domains. Upon proper covalent attachment of these domains to the N-terminus of one of the receptors by an Ub-ligase, the complex would be signaled for degradation by the 26S proteasome. These two mechanisms provide a possible logical explanation for the biochemically euthyroid, clinical hypothyroid states which occur in ill-defined diseases involving IFN-alpha/beta dysregulations such as CFS [3], or during intensive IFN therapy [9, 10 and 11]. The further documentation of these mechanisms would undoubtedly allow the development of means intended at counteracting these unwanted effects of signal transduction by IFN-alpha/beta. Figure captions Fig. 1. Alignment of the respective aa sequences (single letter code) of gi703104 (partial TRIP14 sequence), p56, and p59 2-5OASL proteins and the three 2-5OAS enzymes. Identities are displayed in black and conservative replacements in gray. Fig. 2. Alignment of the 20 aa stretch containing the Phi xx Phi Phi motif of the 2-5OASL proteins with the receptor binding domain 2 (RBD2) of the TR nuclear corepressor Alien and the coactivator TRAP220, respectively. Identities are in black, conservative replacements in gray and similar amino acids are boxed. The aa stretch of the 2-5OASL proteins displays a significant level of similarity with the corresponding sequence of the Alien corepressor, particularly in the nine aa upstream to the hydrophobic core. Fig. 3. Alignment of the 60 amino acid stretch of the 2-5OAS family members with the SCAN domain consensus (above). The amino acids conserved in all the SCAN proteins identified so far are marked by blacktriangle up tri, filled at the bottom of the alignment. It is worth noting that beside the high degree of identity with the consensus, the 2-5OASL proteins contain also the Leux6Leu motif specific of this domain. Fig. 4. Alignment of the C-terminal sequence of p56 and p59 OAS with the ubiquitin (Ub) consensus and the Ub signatures, respectively. The Xs stand for any aa. Fig. 5. Proposed mechanisms for the induction of thyroid resistance by the p30 (part A) and the p56/59 (part 2-5OASL proteins. 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