BCHM 218 Study Guide - Quiz Guide: Corepressor, Heat Shock Protein, Nuclear Receptor

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Steroid hormones operate in the nucleus to activate transcription of particular genes: thyroid and retinoid hormones have the same mode of action. Steroid hormones too hydrophobic to dissolve readily in the blood travel on specific carrier proteins to the cell and simply diffuse into the cell in order to bind to their specific nuclear receptor protein (nrs) Two major types of steroid-binding nrs: type i. The receptor is initially blocked by hsp70 (a heat shock protein) On binding the steroid hormone, hsp70 dissociates allowing nr to. Initially located in the cytoplasm dimerize and expose a nuclear import signal. After being imported into the nucleus it functions as a tf: type ii. Located in the nucleus and bound to dna. Typically bound to dna as a heterodimer. Often binding of the hormone releases a corepressor and promotes the binding of a coactivator which in turn promotes the recruitment of rna pol.

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