Regulation of constitutive and inducible AHR signaling : complex interactions involving the AHR repressorstar
Regulation of constitutive and inducible AHR signaling : complex interactions involving the AHR repressorstar
Date
2008-10-09
Authors
Hahn, Mark E.
Allan, Lenka L.
Sherr, David H.
Allan, Lenka L.
Sherr, David H.
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Keywords
Aryl hydrocarbon receptor
Aryl hydrocarbon receptor repressor
PAS proteins
Cancer
Toxicology
Aryl hydrocarbon receptor repressor
PAS proteins
Cancer
Toxicology
Abstract
The AHR is well known for regulating responses to an array of environmental chemicals.
A growing body of evidence supports the hypothesis that the AHR also plays perhaps an even
more important role in modulating critical aspects of cell function including cell growth, death,
and migration. As these and other important AHR activities continue to be elucidated, it becomes
apparent that attention now must be directed towards the mechanisms through which the AHR
itself is regulated. Here, we review what is known of and what biological outcomes have been
attributed to the AHR repressor (AHRR), an evolutionarily conserved bHLH-PAS protein that
inhibits both xenobiotic-induced and constitutively active AHR transcriptional activity in
multiple species. We discuss the structure and evolution of the AHRR and the dominant
paradigm of a xenobiotic-inducible negative feedback loop comprised of AHR-mediated
transcriptional up-regulation of AHRR and the subsequent AHRR-mediated suppression of AHR
activity. We highlight the role of the AHRR in limiting AHR activity in the absence of
xenobiotic AHR ligands and the important contribution of constitutively repressive AHRR to
cancer biology. In this context, we also suggest a new hypothesis proposing that, under some
circumstances, constitutively active AHR may repress AHRR transcription, resulting in unbridled
AHR activity. We also review the predominant hypotheses on the molecular mechanisms
through which AHRR inhibits AHR as well as novel mechanisms through which the AHRR may
exert AHR-independent effects. Collectively, this discussion emphasizes the importance of this
understudied bHLH-PAS protein in tissue development, normal cell biology, xenobiotic
responsiveness, and AHR-regulated malignancy.
Description
Author Posting. © Elsevier B.V., 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Biochemical Pharmacology 77(2009): 485-497, doi:10.1016/j.bcp.2008.09.016.