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1.
Fetal mouse tissues on gestational days 14, 16 and 19 were incubated with 14C-corticosterone (B) and 3H-11-dehydrocorticosterone (A), and the steroids were separated chromatograhically to determine the ratio reduction/dehydrogenation. In placenta the ratio remained high, >6, throughout this period, while it rose from 0.06 to 0.6 in brain and from 0.1 to 0.5 in gut. In liver, the ratio increased from 0.29 on day 14 to 3.54 on day 16; in lung it rose from 0.29 on day 16 to 6.7 on day 19. Injection of mothers 16 hr earlier with dexamethasone increased the ratio in lung and placenta on day 16 but not earlier. The unchanged 3H-corticosterone recovered from fetal tissues 15 min after injection into mothers was <3% on day 14 but increased manyfold in all tissues by day 19. It is concluded that corticosteroids are regulated in fetal mouse tissues by the interconversion of the hormone and its 11-dehydro metabolite, and that the pattern varies in different tissues and changes with gestational age.  相似文献   

2.
Corticosterone binding by rat brain cytosol   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Significant quantities of corticosterone were associated with macromolecules of the brain cytosol following intrathecal administration of [3H]corticosterone to adrenalectomized rats. Fifteen times more steroid was found associated with proteins from adrenalectomized rats than from control animals or adrenalectomized animals pretreated with corticosterone. Pretreatment of adrenalectomized rats with 11-dehydrocorticosterone, Cortisol and cortisone decreased the amount of [3H]corticosterone found associated with protein, whereas progesterone, oestradiol and testosterone did not interfere with the association of [3H]corticosterone with macromolecules of the cytosol. Further evidence for protein-steroid interaction was obtained by incubating [3H]corticosterone (B), [3H]cortisol (F), or 11-[3H]deoxycortisol (S) with brain cytosols. The degree of binding was in the order B > F > S.  相似文献   

3.
In vitro binding affinities of various progestins to cytosol and nuclear progesterone receptors of rabbit uterus were determined and correlated with the biological potency of these steroids. In addition, cytosol and nuclear progesterone receptor levels were measured after a 5-day administration of different progestins (0.5 mg/kg daily) with variable biologic activites. The receptor levels were compared with the bilological response; the induction of uteroglobin synthesis. Cytosol and nuclear progesterone receptors had identical steroid binding properties (r = 0.98). The correlation between the in vitro binding affinity (cytosol or nuclear) and the in vivo biologic activity of the steroids was good (r = 0.73). After a 5-day treatment with progestins, the nuclear receptor concentration correlated in an inverse manner (r = ?0.84) with the uterine fluid unteroglobin concentration. A similar, but slightly weaker correlation (r = ?0.81) was also found for the cytosol receptor content and uteroglobin secretion. These data indicate that not only nuclear, but also cytosol progesterone receptor levels decrease in the rabbit uterus during chronic hormone action. Decline in the nuclear progesterone receptor content seemed to occur during treatment with all progestational steroids, while onlyi progestins with high biological potency were capable of decreasing the cytosol receptor content.  相似文献   

4.
The interactions in vitro between [3H]estradiol and liver proteins from Xenopus laevis have been examined to determine if the binding reaction meets criteria of steroid-receptors which may function in the induction of vitellogenesis. Estrogenic hormones associated with proteins in serum and liver cytosol from Xenopus laevis. However, the interactions between soluble liver proteins and estrogens apparently do not result from serum contamination of liver as specific binding was distinguishable by ligand affinity and by differential mobility on polyacrylamide gels. Steroid ligands bound by liver proteins during incubation in vitro were examined by solubility and by thin-layer chromatography. Only a small percentage (13%) of the bound radioactive ligand was recovered as the original tritium-labeled steroid, 17β-estradiol. The major ligand was recovered as a water-soluble metabolite of estradiol which was identified tentatively as an estradiol-glucoside. To investigate whether the protein-bound estradiol metabolite(s) merely masks a small amount of authentic estradiol-receptor complexes or if the metabolite could be an intermediate in estrogen function, isolated liver nuclei were incubated with liver cytosol containing 3H-labeled steroid-protein complexes or with serum protein-bound [3H]estradiol. Nuclei preferentially accumulated 3H-labelea steroids from liver cytosol protein-steroid complexes relative to [3H]estradiol from serum proteins. However, analysis of the steroids recovered in the nuclei after incubation with liver cytosol revealed that both 17β-[3H]estradiol and the 3H-labeled water-soluble metabolite were retained in vitro by nuclei.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The in vitro binding of several radioactive steroids was examined in mouse placental tissue, using Sephadex chromatography to separate the labelled steroid complex from free steroids. Binding was exhibited by cortisol, corticosterone and progesterone, but not cortisone. Cortexolone, an antiglucocorticoid, was tested in the system and found to reduce the binding of the active steroids. The displacement of labelled corticosterone by addition of unlabelled steroids was also examined. Preliminary characterization of the corticosterone receptor using hydrolytic enzymes suggested a protein nature on the basis of degradation by pronase but not by nucleases.  相似文献   

7.
In the present study, the binding affinities of 28 androgens for two nuclear androgen receptors (AR), termed AR1 and AR2, in Atlantic croaker (Micropogonias undulatus) brain and ovarian tissues, respectively, were determined using competitive binding assays. The 5alpha-reduction of steroids, in general, increased the metabolite's binding affinity for AR2 while decreasing it for AR1. In addition, few androgens bound to AR1 with high affinity and modifications to the basic 3-ketone,4-ene,17beta-hydroxy structure of testosterone usually reduced its binding affinity for AR1. However, androgens with ketone groups at the 3- and 17-position bound with high affinity to AR1 provided that the androgen had either a 5alpha-reduced A-ring or a third ketone group at the 11-position. This suggests that there may be several high affinity conformations that AR1 can occupy depending upon whether an androgen possesses a ketone or a hydroxyl group at the 17-position. The binding of androgens to AR2 showed a more predictable pattern, 5alpha-reduced steroids bound better than 4-ene steroids and any changes to the basic 3-keto,17-hydroxy motif of 5alpha-dihydrotestosterone lowered the binding affinity of a steroid. However, these structural changes often caused only minor decreases in binding affinity, such that AR2 has a broader affinity for androgens and a greater affinity than AR1 for structurally diverse androgens. Widely different androgen binding affinities of AR1 and AR2 suggest that these two nuclear androgen receptors may mediate the physiological actions of different androgens in teleosts.  相似文献   

8.
A specific glucocorticoid binding macromolecule of rabbit uterine cytosol   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A high affinity (Kd=2.7 × 10?10M at 0°) dexamethasone binding macro-molecule has been identified in the cytosol fraction of rabbit uteri. Competition studies show high specificity for glucocorticoids since binding of labeled dexamethasone is inhibited by cortisol and corticosterone but not by progesterone, testosterone, or estradiol 17β. The binding component has a sedimentation coefficient of 8S and its concentration in uterine cytosol is about 0.2 pmoles per mg protein. Uptake of labeled dexamethasone by isolated uterine nuclei requires the presence of cytosol and is temperature dependent. The KCl-extractable nuclear complex sediments at 4S. Thus the dexamethasone binding components of the rabbit uterus have properties similar to those described for steroid hormone receptors present in target tissues. Specific dexamethasone binding could not be demonstrated in rat uterine cytosol.  相似文献   

9.
Summary We have examined the effect of Na+,K+-ATPase on 3H-triamcinolone acetonide binding capacity of cytosol glucocorticoid receptors from rat brain and liver. Preincubation of the brain or liver cytosol with Na+,K+-ATPase (10 units/ml) at 30 °C resulted in a rapid loss of specific 3H-triamcinolone acetonide binding, with a half-life of approximately 7 min. The ATPase effect could be prevented by the addition of 10–5 M ouabain, or substantially reduced by the omission of Na+,K+ or Mg+2. The cytosol receptor bound with 3H-triamcinolone acetonide was totally resistant to the inactivation by the ATPase. Since there is some evidence that ATP may bind to glucocorticoid receptor, our findings indicate that an ATP-receptor complex may be essential for steroid binding. The effects of the ATPase in the inactivation of the receptor are very similar to those of alkaline phosphatase reported by others. This raises doubts about the proposal based on the phosphatase inactivation that the cytosol glucocorticoid receptor may be phosphorylated.  相似文献   

10.
Radioiodinated bovine serum albumin conjugated to progesterone was used as a probe to examine binding parameters of steroids to membrane preparations from rat brain tissue. The binding of 11 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone-11-hemisuccinate-125I-bovine serum albumin conjugate reached saturation after 30 min of incubation at 5 degrees C. Several bovine serum albumin-conjugated steroids were then tested for competition displacement studies. Among these steroid conjugates, the bovine serum albumin conjugate at position 3 of progesterone had the highest affinity, with an estimated inhibition constant of 28.5 +/- 2.1 nM (n = 3), whereas bovine serum albumin itself and the 17 beta-estradiol 6-(O-carboxy-methyl)oxime-bovine serum albumin conjugate showed no specific displacement. In addition, the binding sites were localized in an axolemma-enriched fraction of rat brainstem. Specific binding was obtained in tissues from cerebral cortex, brainstem, cerebellum, corpus striatum, and hypothalamus, but little or no binding occurred in uterus, ovary, liver, and spleen. The present data indicate that progesterone-125I-bovine serum albumin conjugate can be used as a ligand to study progesterone-membrane receptor interactions.  相似文献   

11.
The goals of this study were to determine thesteroid-binding specificity of the mouse salivaryandrogen-binding protein (ABP) family and to ascertainwhether there might be other proteins in mouse saliva capable of binding steroids. The optimalconditions for testosterone binding by mouse salivaryproteins were determined using a small-scalechromatography system to separate bound from unboundsteroid. Testosterone binding appeared to be biphasicbut was directly proportional to saliva concentration,with an optimum temperature of 37 C in the second phase.These results were used to develop a steroid-binding protocol to study the steroid specificity ofsalivary proteins separated by electrophoresis. The ABPfamily bound testosterone and progesterone well andHO-progesterone and DHT to a lesser extent but did not bind either cholesterol or estradiol.Steroid structural comparisons suggest that binding byABP is governed by the A ring of the steroid. Anotherprotein that is not a member of the ABP family bound cholesterol specifically but no protein thatspecifically bound estradiol was observed.  相似文献   

12.
Some of the early steps of steroid hormone action have been studied in cultured hepatoma cells, in which glucocorticoids induce tyrosine aminotransferase. The hypothesis that inducer steroids promote the binding of specific cytoplasmic receptors to the cell nucleus has been examined in intact cells.Binding of steroids such as dexamethasone and cortisol results in a loss of most of the receptor sites from the cytoplasm. This coincides with the binding of an equivalent number of steroid molecules in the nucleus. Both processes occur concomitantly, even when their kinetics are altered by reducing the temperature. When the inducer is removed from the culture, steroid dissociates from the nucleus while the level of cytoplasmic receptor returns to normal, even if protein or RNA synthesis is inhibited. These results suggest that nuclear binding of glucocorticoids is due to the association with the nucleus of the cytoplasmic receptor-steroid complex itself and make it unlikely that the receptor acts as a mere carrier for the intracellular transfer of the steroid.Steroids that differ in their effects on tyrosine aminotransferase induction were also studied. In contrast to those bound with inducer steroids, receptors complexed with the anti-inducer progesterone did not leave the cytosol. Further, a suboptimal inducer (deoxycorticosterone) produced an intermediate level of depletion. Thus, the biological effect of different classes of steroids can be related to their capacity to promote nuclear binding of the receptor. These data support a model proposed earlier, according to which the receptor is an allosteric regulatory protein directly involved in the hormone action, under the control of specific steroid ligands. They further suggest that the conformational state influenced by the inducer is such that a nuclear binding site on the receptor is exposed.Evidence is also presented that a distinct reaction takes place between the binding of the steroid to the receptor and the association of the complex with the nucleus. At 0 °C, this change is rate-limiting. It could correspond to the “activation” of receptor-steroid complexes known to be required for binding of the complexes by isolated nuclei, and thus represent an additional step in hormone action.  相似文献   

13.
Some previous reports on acellular binding of glucocorticoid · receptor complexes to rat liver nuclei have pointed to the conclusion that there exists a small number of high affinity nuclear “receptor” sites. Various investigations lead us to the opposite conclusion and suggest that these results were actually due to the presence, in the cytosol, of one or several macromolecules which inhibited the binding to nuclei of steroid · receptor complexes. The mechanism of this inhibition was examined. It appeared to be due not to a competition between both molecules for the same nuclear acceptor site but to an interaction in the cytosol between teh inhibitor and the steroid · receptor complex which prevented the binding of the latter to the nuclei. The search for high affinity specific acceptor sites was also negative for physiological saline conditions and for the non-salt-extractable fraction of the nuclear receptor. When 940-fold purified receptor · steroid complexes were used, very high concentrations of complexes could be achieved and saturation of nuclei was then observed, but only under physiological ionic strength conditions. However, the interaction was of relatively low affinity (KA = 3.8 · 107 M?1) and to a great number of acceptor sites (N = 26.2 pmol/mg DNA), largely exceeding the cellular concentration of receptor (5.8 pmol/mg DNA).These results suggested that saturation of nuclei by steroid · receptor complexes should not occur in the intact liver cell. They were confirmed by studies on the distribution of steroid · receptor complexes in liver slices incubated with various concentrations of [3H]dexamethasone. For all hormone concentrations a constant proportion (90%) of the complexes was found in the nuclei, thus showing no saturation of the nuclear acceptor sites.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The concentrations of progesterone, androstenedione, testosterone, 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone and androsterone were determined in tissue samples from the human hypothalamus, anterior pituitary, pineal, amygdala and parietal cortex, taken at autopsy from male (n = 4) and female cadavers (n = 4) of various ages. The measurements were performed using radioimmunoassays for the individual steroids after the chromatographic purification of solvent extracts of tissue samples on Lipidex-5000TM. Preliminary qualitative analyses of the chromatographic profiles of various steroids by radioimmunoassay demonstrated the presence of these steroids in various regions of the brain, but an immunoreactive peak corresponding to 17-hydroxyprogesterone was not found. The concentrations (ng/g tissue wet wt.) of all steroids measured were either very low or below the limit of detection in brain tissues taken from male and female infants. In the adult brain, there was no difference in the distribution of steroids between the various regions studied. There was no sex difference in the brain tissue steroid concentrations, with the exception of testosterone which was clearly much higher in brain tissues from men as compared to women. Although testosterone was undetectable in most samples taken from adult women. 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone could be measured in almost all samples, which suggests that this is the most important androgen in the human brain. When brain tissue steroid levels are compared with serum concentrations, it can be postulated that a state of equilibrium exists between the fraction of serum steroids which are not bound to high-affinity binding proteins and the amount of steroids in brain tissues.  相似文献   

16.
To examine the binding specificity of steroid hormone-cytoplasmic receptor complexes to nuclei, binding of 3H-dexamethasone (Dex)-liver, 3H-Dex-thymus and 3H-dihydrotestosterone (DHT)-prostate receptor complexes to nuclei from liver, prostate, thymus, spleen and kidney was studied. It was observed that a significant amount of steroid-receptor complexes was bound to any nuclei used in the present study and the extent of the binding of receptor complexes to nuclei from homologous tissues was not always greater than that to nuclei from heterogenous tissues. However, a significant portion of the 3H-Dex-liver and 3H-DHT-prostate receptor complexes was not absorbed by nuclei from kidney, spleem, and thymus, and the unabsorbed complexes were efficiently bound to liver and prostate nuclei. The results obtained indicate that two types of receptor complex with regard to nuclear binding were present in cytosols of liver and prostate; one binds to nuclei from kidney, spleen, thymus, liver and prostate and the other does not bind to nuclei from kidney, spleen and thymus but does bind to nuclei of liver and prostate. The latter type of receptor complex was not observed in the cytosol from the thymus.  相似文献   

17.
MPA (medroxyprogeste)rone acetate) has been shown to be te)ratogenic in rabbits but not in rats or mice (Andrew and Staples 1977). Since normal steroid action appears to be mediated, in large part, through interaction with specific steroid receptors, it was postulated that the species difference in teratogenicity might be due to a difference in the interaction of MPA with target cells. A primary event in steroid-cell interaction is the binding of a steroid to intracellular receptors. Studies were initiated to measure the specific nature of MPA binding to glucocorticoid and progestin receptors in appropriate rat and rabbit target tissues. The competition of MPA with 3H-dexamethasone binding in liver cytosol (glucocorticoid receptor) and with 3H-progesterone binding in uterine cytosol (progesterone receptor) was determined. In rabbit liver cytosol, MPA was as effective at competing for specific dexamethasone binding as the natural glucocorticoids and considerably more effective than the nonspecific steroids. In rat liver cytosol MPA was only 10% as effective as the natural glucocorticoids and the competition could not be distinguished from that of nonspecific steroids. A similar species difference was not seen in uterine cytosol; MPA competed with progesterone in a similar fashion in both rat and rabbit. These data demonstrate a distinct species difference in the competitive nature of MPA for the glucocorticoid receptor but not for the progestin receptor. The results suggest that MPA, or possibly a metabolite, may be teratogenic in rabbits by binding with specific glucocorticoid receptors to inhibit or alter normal steroidal function in embryo-fetal development.  相似文献   

18.
Glucocorticoid uptake by AtT-20/D-1 mouse pituitary adenocarcinoma cells grown in tissue culture was examined. The binding of triamcinolone acetonide, a potent synthetic glucocorticoid, by intact cells and by cell cytosol was studied at both 4 and 25 degrees. Specific binding of [3H]triamcinolone acetonide by intact cells was markedly different from cell-free cytosol binding at 4 degrees. Intact cells bound a relatively small amount of labeled steroid within 2 min, after which no further binding was observed. In contrast, the receptor in a cell-free cytosol preparation was capable of binding steroid progressively at 4 degrees, indicating that the limited binding by intact cells was not a consequence of receptor characteristics. At 25 degrees, uptake by intact cells and cytosol was nearly identical and appeared to be limited only by the binding kinetics of the cytosol receptor. Estradiol-17 beta, a nonglucocorticoid steroid, was not bound by the AtT-20/D-1 cell at 4 degrees. Triamcinolone was not bound significantly at 4 or 25 degrees by an adrenal carcinoma cell that does not appear to be a glucocorticoid target cell. An Arrhenius plot of cell steroid uptake vs. the reciprocal of absolute temperature revealed an abrupt change in slope at 16 degrees, which is compatible with the temperature-dependent mechanism involved in glucocortidoid uptake being associated with lipid constituents of the cell membrane. These data suggest that glucocorticoid uptake by this target cell involves a mechanism of specific, temperature-dependent transport through the cell membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Two distinct nuclear androgen receptors (ARs) were identified in brain and ovarian tissues of kelp bass, Paralabrax clathratus, termed kbAR1 and kbAR2, which correspond to the two nuclear ARs we have previously characterized in Atlantic croaker, Micropogonias undulatus, termed acAR1 and acAR2. Scatchard analysis of nuclear fractions of whole brain tissue demonstrated that kbAR1 had a single class of high-affinity binding sites for testosterone (T; K(d) of 1. 8 nM and B(max) of 1.0 pmol/g tissue), whereas cytosolic fractions of kbAR2 ovarian tissue had a single class of high-affinity binding sites for dihydrotestosterone (DHT; K(d) of 0.1 nM and B(max) of 0.5 pmol/g tissue). Competition studies showed that both kbAR1 and kbAR2 were specific for androgens. However, kbAR1 bound only T with high affinity, whereas kbAR2 bound DHT, mibolerone, 17alpha-methyl-testosterone, T, and 11-ketotestosterone with high affinity. In addition, we examined the binding affinities of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane and its derivatives, several hydroxylated polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners, PCB mixtures, and the fungicide vinclozolin and its two metabolites M1 and M2 for the two ARs in Atlantic croaker ovarian, testicular, and brain tissues and in kelp bass ovarian and brain tissues. Only 4, 4'-PCB-3-OH and 2',5'-PCB-3-OH demonstrated greater than 50% displacement of [(3)H]testosterone from either acAR1 or kbAR1. In contrast, with the exception of vinclozolin, all of the xenobiotics examined demonstrated binding to acAR2 in testicular and ovarian tissues. The binding affinities were highest in the testicular tissue with M2, 2,2'5'-PCB-4-OH, and o,p'-DDD all binding with EC(50)s less than 10 microM. The binding affinities of xenobiotics to kbAR2 in ovarian tissue were similar to their binding affinities for ovarian acAR2. The finding that AR1 and AR2 possess different binding affinities for natural androgens and synthetic steroids, as well as for xenobiotics, suggests that the activities of androgens and of certain xenobiotics will depend upon the type of AR present within the target tissue.  相似文献   

20.
The growth of the SC-115 mammary carcinoma in mice is androgen dependent. Estrogens antagonize the androgen effect. The high affinity binding of androgens and estrogens has been studied in soluble extracts of the tumor, of primary culture cells and clone MI1 cells.Results indicate that two distinct specific steroid hormone-binding sites (termed ‘receptors’) are found in all cytosol fractions. The androgen-receptor (A) binds testosterone, androstanolone, cyproterone (an anti-androgen), progesterone and estradiol, but only very weakly non-steroidal diethylstilbestrol. The estrogen-receptor (E) binds estrogenic substances such as estradiol and diethylstilbestrol, but no androgen. The apparent KD, eq for A and E receptors of [3H]androstanolone and [3H]estradiol respectively, is identical (-0.5-1 nM at 4 °C). The affinity of estradiol for the A-receptor, when measured against [3H]androstanolone binding, indicates a Ki = 17.5 nM. The concentration of binding sites is of the order of 0.1 pmole/mg protein (somewhat higher for A than for E receptor) in MI1 cell cytosol. Studies by ultracentrifugation through glycerol-Tris gradients (low salt medium) reveal the macromolecular nature of the cytosol A and E receptors (7–7.5 S). Evidence is presented of the transfer of the A and the E receptors to nuclei after incubation of tumor slices as well as of clone MI1 cells with the corresponding hormones.Experiments suggest that the two different binding sites are present on two separated macromolecular moieties. After incubation at 37 °C of tumor slices with 10–20 nM [3H]testosterone, or with 10 nM [3H]estradiol, the corresponding radioactive hormone-receptor complexes are, as expected, found in the nuclear KCl extracts. In parallel experiments, where slices are incubated with non-radioactive hormones at the same concentration and the nuclear KCl extracts subsequently treated by radioactive steroids, no available androgen-binding sites are found in the nuclei after exposure to estradiol, nor estrogen-binding sites after exposure to testosterone.Therefore, in the same cell, two receptors are present which bind androgens and estrogens with high affinity, and one given hormone (estradiol) can be specifically bound (with different affinities) by two different receptors which, however, discriminate a synthetic analog (diethylstilbestrol). The data may give some molecular background for interpreting responses to the same hormone which may differ at various concentrations, for studying effects of analogs, and for analysing the control of tumor growth by antagonistic steroids.  相似文献   

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