Estrogen-related receptor

The ERRs are orphan nuclear receptors, meaning the identity of their endogenous ligand has yet to be unambiguously determined. They are named because of sequence homology with estrogen receptors, but do not appear to bind estrogens or other tested steroid hormones.

estrogen-related receptor alpha
Identifiers
SymbolESRRA
Alt. symbolsESRL1
NCBI gene2101
HGNC3471
OMIM601998
RefSeqNM_004451
UniProtP11474
Other data
LocusChr. 11 q12
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DomainsInterPro
estrogen-related receptor beta
Identifiers
SymbolESRRB
Alt. symbolsESRL2
NCBI gene2103
HGNC3473
OMIM602167
RefSeqNM_004452
UniProtO95718
Other data
LocusChr. 14 q24.3
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estrogen-related receptor gamma
Identifiers
SymbolESRRG
NCBI gene2104
HGNC3474
OMIM602969
RefSeqNM_206595
UniProtP62508
Other data
LocusChr. 1 q41
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DomainsInterPro

There are three human estrogen related receptors:

ERRs bind enhancers throughout the genome where they exert effects on gene regulation. The ERR family exhibit varying transcriptional activation capabilities and physically interact with the transcriptional co-activators PGC1-alpha and PGC1-beta, via their AF-2 domains and the leucine-rich nuclear receptor interacting motifs (LxxLL) present in the PGC-1 proteins, The ERR family have been demonstrated to control energy homeostasis, oxidative metabolism, and mitochondrial biogenesis, while effecting mammalian physiology in the heart, brown adipose tissue, white adipose tissue, placenta, macrophages, and demonstrated additional roles in diabetes and cancer. The contributions of individual ERRs to physiology continue to be elucidated through the generation of sophisticated tissue-specific gene knockout mouse models.

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