Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
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197th Meeting of the Society for Endocrinology

Symposia

Novel regulation of orphan receptor function

ea0012s9 | Novel regulation of orphan receptor function | SFE2006

The ups and downs of nuclear receptor action in metabolic tissues

Parker M , Kiskinis E , Christian M , Seth A , Debevec D , Nichol D , Steel J , White R

Nuclear receptors control developmental and physiological processes by regulating the transcription of gene networks in specific cells. This is achieved by the recruitment of coactivators and corepressors that lead to chromatin remodelling and alterations in gene transcription. RIP140 is a ligand dependant corepressor for nuclear receptors that plays key roles in adipose tissue and muscle to regulate energy homeostasis.RIP140 regulates carbohydrate and l...

ea0012s10 | Novel regulation of orphan receptor function | SFE2006

Repression of NR5A nuclear receptors by SUMO and DEAD-box proteins

Wang Y , Sampathkumar Y , Peiris DN , Manan RA , Lebedeva LA , Suzawa M , Wadekar SA , Desclozeaux M , Ingraham HA , Lee MB

The Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 5A member, Steroidogenic Factor 1 (SF-1, Ad4BP, NR5A1), is critical for steroidogenesis, stress responses, sexual differentiation and body weight regulation in mice. Patients with rare mutations in SF-1 have confirmed its role in male sexual differentiation and adrenal response to physiological stress in humans. In contrast, Liver Receptor Homologue 1 (LRH-1, FTF, CPF, NR5A2) is involved in endoderm development, bile acid and lipid metabolism and...

ea0012s11 | Novel regulation of orphan receptor function | SFE2006

Role of LXRs in lipid metabolism and inflammation

Castrillo A

The Liver X Receptors (LXRs) are members of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily and play a key role as intracellular cholesterol sensors. LXRs control the expression of crucial genes associated with cholesterol absorption, excretion and efflux and are therefore key determinants of atherosclerosis susceptibility. In addition, recent studies have revealed the existence of crosstalk between macrophage inflammatory pathways and LXR signaling. In activated macrophages, LXR ago...