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1.
The possible reversibility of pH induced activation of the glucocorticoid-receptor complex was studied. Generally, this was accomplished by activating rat liver cytosol at pH 8.5 (15 degrees C, 30 min), and then returning it to pH 6.5 for a second incubation (15 degrees C, 30 min). Activation was quantitated by measuring the binding of [3H]triamcinolone acetonide [( 3H]TA)-receptor complexes to DNA-cellulose. When cytosol was incubated at pH 6.5, only 4.1% of the [3H]TA-receptor complexes bound to DNA-cellulose. However, 39.2% of the complexes bound when the cytosol was pH activated. When pH activation was followed by a second incubation at pH 6.5, 47.0% of the steroid-receptor complexes bound. Thus, according to the DNA-cellulose binding assay, pH induced activation was irreversible. In order to visualize both activated and unactivated [3H]TA-receptor complexes during this process, diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-cellulose chromatography was performed. When cytosol was incubated at pH 6.5, only 19.6% of the [3H]TA-receptor complexes were eluted in the activated form from DEAE-cellulose. However, 67.5% of the complexes were eluted in the activated form when cytosol was pH activated. When pH activation was followed by a second incubation at pH 6.5, 74.9% of the steroid-receptor complexes were eluted in the activated form. Thus, DEAE-cellulose chromatography also showed that pH induced activation was irreversible. This is the first known report that the combination of DNA-cellulose binding and DEAE-cellulose chromatography have been used to study pH induced activation of the glucocorticoid-receptor complex. By these criteria, we conclude that in vitro pH induced activation is irreversible.  相似文献   

2.
Thermal "activation" or "transformation" of rat hepatic [6,7-3H]triamcinolone acetonide (TA)-receptor complexes purified in the unactivated state to near homogeneity (Grandics, P., Miller, A., Schmidt, T. J., Mittman, D., and Litwack, G. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 3173-3180) has been further investigated. The data generated in reconstitution experiments demonstrate that warming (25 degrees C for 30 min) of the purified unactivated complexes promotes their activation as judged by an increase in DNA-cellulose binding, but to a lower extent than that observed after warming of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes in crude cytosols. However, maximal DNA-cellulose binding capacity can be detected in reconstituted systems (also heated at 25 degrees C for 30 min) consisting of purified unactivated [3H]TA-receptor complexes and a cytoplasmic "stimulator(s)." This cytoplasmic factor(s), which does not copurify with the receptor, is heat-stable (90 degrees C for 30 min), excluded from Sephadex G-25, and trypsin-sensitive and stimulates DNA-cellulose binding in a dose-dependent manner. The ability of Na2MoO4 to block thermal activation of the highly purified receptor complexes suggests that this transition metal anion interacts directly with the receptor protein itself. The fact that the cytoplasmic stimulator(s) enhances DNA-cellulose binding of the [3H]TA-receptor complexes without increasing the proportion of those complexes eluted in the activated (low salt) position from DEAE-cellulose is consistent with a proposed two-step model of in vitro activation. During the Na2MoO4-sensitive Step 1, elevated temperature (25 degrees C for 30 min) may directly alter the conformation of the purified receptor complexes (i.e. subunit dissociation or disaggregation), resulting in the appropriate shift in the elution profile of the [3H]TA-receptor complexes on DEAE-cellulose but only in a minimal (approximately 2-3-fold) increase in the binding of these complexes to DNA-cellulose. During the Na2MoO4-insensitive and temperature-independent Step 2, a heat-stable cytoplasmic protein(s) may interact with these thermally activated [3H]TA-receptor complexes and enhance their ability to bind to DNA-cellulose without further increasing the percentage of those complexes which elute from DEAE-cellulose in the activated position. In crude cytosols these two steps would presumably occur simultaneously, and addition of Na2MoO4 prior to warming would block Step 1 and hence Step 2 would not occur.  相似文献   

3.
Neoplastic epithelial duct cell line from human salivary gland (HSG cell) contained cytosol glucocorticoid receptor. Scatchard analysis of cytosol indicated that the dissociation constant (Kd) was 5.6-6.5 nmol/l and the number of binding sites was 83-92 fmol/mg protein. A competitive assay showed that the binding sites for [3H]triamcinolone acetonide were specific to glucocorticoid. Glycerol density gradient centrifugation displayed that the [3H]triamcinolone acetonide receptor complexes sedimented in the 8.5 S region under low salt conditions and in the 4.2 S region under high salt condition (0.4 M KCl). The same high salt conditions induced an increased binding of [3H]triamcinolone acetonide complexes for DNA-cellulose.  相似文献   

4.
Cortexolone functions as an antiglucocorticoid in the human leukemic cell line CEM-C7, since it blocks the growth inhibition and cell lysis mediated by the potent agonist triamcinolone acetonide (TA). At high concentrations (10(-5) M) cortexolone alone is inactive. The ability of cortexolone to block the TA-mediated biological effects is reflected in its ability (1000-fold molar excess) to effectively block the binding of [3H]TA to the cytoplasmic unactivated form of the receptors eluted from DEAE-cellulose at approx. 180 mM potassium phosphate (KP). Likewise a 1000-fold molar excess of TA inhibits the specific binding of [3H]cortexolone to the unactivated receptors and to a peak which elutes at low salt concentration (35 mM KP) but does not appear to represent activated [3H]cortexolone-receptor complexes. Thermal activation/transformation (25 degrees C for 30 min +/- 10 mM ATP) of the [3H]TA-receptor complexes significantly enhances the subsequent DNA-cellulose binding capacity of these complexes and also results in their elution from DEAE-cellulose at the low salt (50 mM KP) activated position. In contrast, exposure of the cytoplasmic [3H]cortexolone-receptor complexes to identical in vitro activating (transforming) conditions fails to enhance subsequent DNA-cellulose binding capacity or to result in the appropriate shift in DEAE-cellulose elution profile. This inability of [3H]cortexolone to facilitate activation/transformation of receptors was also verified using cytosol prepared from the glucocorticoid-resistant 'activation-labile' mutant, 3R7. Taken collectively the data suggest that cortexolone, unlike an agonist such as TA, fails to promote in vitro activation/transformation, a conformational change which also occurs in vivo under physiological conditions and is a prerequisite for nuclear binding.  相似文献   

5.
[3H]Dexamethasone-receptor complexes from rat liver cytosol preincubated at 0° bind poorly to DNA-cellulose. However, if the steroid-receptor complex is subjected to gel filtration at 0–4° separating it from the low molecular weight components of cytosol, the steroid-receptor complex becomes “activated” enabling its binding to DNA-cellulose. This activation can be prevented if the gel filtration column is first equilibrated with the low molecular weight components of cytosol. In addition, if adrenalectomized rat liver cytosol, in the absence of exogeneous steroid, is subjected to gel filtration the macromolecular fractions separated from the “small molecules” of that cytosol have much reduced binding activity towards [3H]dexamethasone. These results suggest that rat liver cytosol contains a low molecular weight component(s) which maintains the glucocorticoid receptor in a conformational state that allows the binding of dexamethasone. Furthermore, this component must be removed from the steroid-receptor complex before binding to DNA can occur.  相似文献   

6.
We have identified an endogenous regulator of the glucocorticoid receptor following fractionation of dialyzed rat liver cytosol on DEAE-cellulose. The macromolecular regulator, purified approximately 20-fold as judged by Lowry-reactive material, inhibits activation of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes when assayed by DNA-cellulose binding and by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose minicolumns. In addition the active DEAE-cellulose fraction stabilizes the unoccupied glucocorticoid receptor against heat inactivation. Evidence is presented that the observed inhibition of activation by the active DEAE-cellulose fraction is not due to concentration of cytosolic proteases or RNA. The inhibitory molecule in the active fraction is not stable to heating at 90 degrees C (15 min) and is partially inactivated at 45 degrees C (15-60 min).  相似文献   

7.
Purification of the glucocorticoid receptor from rat liver cytosol.   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
The [3H]-triamcinolone acetonide-labeled glucocorticoid receptor from rat liver cytosol was purified to 85% homogeneity according to sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. It consisted of one subunit with a molecular weight of 89,000 and had one ligand-binding site per molecule. The purification involved sequential chromatography on phosphocellulose, DNA-cellulose twice, and Sephadex G-200. Between the two chromatography steps on DNA-cellulose, the receptor was heat activated. The receptor was affinity eluted from the second DNA-cellulose column with pyrodixal 5'-phosphate. The purification achieved in the first three chromatographic steps varied between 60 and 95% homogeneity in different experiments. After chromatography on the second DNA-cellulose column, the steroid.receptor complex had a Stokes radius of 6.0 nm and a sedimentation coefficient of 3.4 S in 0.15 M KCl. In the absence of KCl, the sedimentation coefficient was 3.6 S. After concentration on hydroxylapatite, the steroid.receptor complex was analyzed by isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide gel. The radioactivity was shown to focus together with the major protein band with pI 5.8. Following limited proteolysis with trypsin, the radioactivity, together with the major protein band, focused at pI 6.2 as previously described for the unpurified steroid.receptor complex.  相似文献   

8.
The binding characteristics of partially purified glucocorticoid receptor complexes from hormone sensitive, non-differentiating BCL1 cells to sequentially deproteinized BCL1 chromatin-cellulose was investigated. [3H]Triamcinolone acetonide (TA)-receptor complexes were purified (approx. 30-fold) from DEAE-cellulose columns by salt elution which allowed receptor activation only in the absence of molybdate. Addition of 10 mM molybdate completely blocked salt activation. The binding pattern of the activated [3H]TA-receptor complexes to chromatin-cellulose extracted with 0-8 M guanidine hydrochloride revealed three regions of increased binding activity (acceptor sites), at 2, 5 and 7 M guanidine hydrochloride. Acceptor site binding was markedly reduced for chromatin extracted with 3, 6 and 8 M guanidine hydrochloride. Non-activated receptor complexes demonstrated very low binding to deproteinized chromatin. It was also shown that chromatin binding required glucocorticoid receptors and that free ligand or ligand bound to other proteins did not bind significantly to chromatin. In addition, binding of [3H]TA-receptor complexes to partially deproteinized chromatin was competable by unlabeled TA-receptor complexes. Scatchard analysis demonstrated that chromatin from non-differentiating BCL1 cells possesses multiple, high-affinity binding sites which differ in their affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor. Partially deproteinized chromatin from lipopolysaccharide-stimulated BCL1 cells demonstrated a different pattern of receptor binding, i.e., receptor binding was significantly greater to chromatin previously extracted with 6-8 M guanidine hydrochloride. These results suggest that differentiation alters the state of chromatin and the interaction of non-histone protein/DNA acceptor sites with glucocorticoid receptors. These alterations may play a role in the acquisition of hormone resistance.  相似文献   

9.
Male and female rat thymic cytosol contained specific androgen receptor. The apparent dissociation constants (Kd) were 2.4 nM in males and 2.5 nM in females, and the number of binding sites (NBS) were 23.7 fmol/mg protein in males and 34.2 fmol/mg protein in females. Transformation of receptor to the DNA binding state was achieved by heat or KCl treatment of [3H]R1881-receptor complex, and the characteristics of transformed and nontransformed receptors were investigated. The nontransformed androgen-receptor complex eluted at 0.20-0.25 M KCl from DEAE-Sephacel and sedimented at 9.1 S and its molecular weight was 255,000 on agarose gel chromatography, while the transformed receptor complex eluted at 0.03-0.15 M KCl with a broad peak and sedimented at 4.5 S and its molecular weight was 80,000-85,000. The minicolumn binding assay revealed that approximately 57% of the total receptor complexes bound to DNA-cellulose following heat treatment (20 degrees C, 1 h). Castration exerted no effect on the physicochemical properties of cytosol androgen receptor, but it increased the number of binding site to the female level.  相似文献   

10.
The activation by salt or ATP of [3H]estradiol- and [3H]H1285-receptor complexes from rabbit uterus and their binding capacity to DNA-cellulose, phosphocellulose and ATP-Sepharose has been studied. The estrogen-receptor was prepared in 1 mM molybdate which stabilized the receptor; but both salt- and ATP-transformation of estrogen receptors occurred. The binding of molybdate-stabilized cytosol [3H]estradiol-receptor complexes to the various resins revealed that salt-activation by 0.3 M KCl caused the greatest binding (5-6-fold) to DNA-cellulose as compared to other resins. However, 5 mM ATP-dependent activation of receptor-complexes resulted in preferential binding to ATP-Sepharose. Activated cytosol [3H]H1285-receptor complexes bound all the resins to a lesser degree when compared to [3H]estradiol-receptor complexes. Partially purified receptor complexes also showed different resin-binding patterns for salt- and ATP-mediated activation. These findings suggest that salt-activation is different than ATP-activation. Further, the differential magnitude of [3H]estradiol- and [3H]H1285-receptor activation suggests that estrogen-receptor complexes are "fully" activated as compared to "partially" activated antiestrogen-receptor complexes.  相似文献   

11.
The binding of the radioactive synthetic hormonal steroids [3H]dexamethasone (9 alpha-fluoro-11 beta, 17 alpha, 21-trihydroxy-16 alpha-methyl-1,4-pregnadiene-3,20-dione) and [3H]methyltrienolone (17 beta-hydroxy-17 alpha-methyl-4,9,11-estratien-3-one) to cytosol from rat skeletal muscle was studied using dextran-coated charcoal to separate unbound and receptor-bound steroid. The rates of association, dissociation, and degradation of the complexes of dexamethasone and methyltrienolone with receptor were highly dependent on temperature. The temperature dependence of association was greater for dexamethasone, and that of degradation was greater for methyltrienolone. Dissociation rates were insignificant for both steroid-receptor complexes compared to association and degradation rates. The apparent equilibrium dissociation constants for the binding of dexamethasone and methyltrienolone to their receptor binding sites were about 7 and 0.3 nM, respectively, regardless of temperature (0. 15 or 23 degrees C). The lack of influence of temperature on the equilibrium constants indicate that the binding was of hydrophobic character, and the corresponding free energy changes upon binding of dexamethasone and methyltrienolone to their respective binding sites were -41 and -49 kJ mol-1 under equilibrium conditions at 0 degrees C. The apparent maximum number of binding sites determined from Scatchard plots under these conditions was about 1900 fmol/g of tissue, 3500 fmol/mg of DNA or 30 fmol/mg of protein in the case of the dexamethasone receptor, and the corresponding figures for the methyltrienolone were about 100 fmol/g of tissue, 200 fmol/mg of DNA or 2 fmol/mg of protein. The ligand specificities of the binding sites for dexamethasone and methyltrienolone were typical of a glucocorticoid and an androgen receptor, respectively. Both steroid-receptor complexes were retained on DNA-cellulose columns, and were eluted by NaCl at an ionic strength of 0.1. The DNA-cellulose step purified about 20 times, and was used to allow gel exclusion chromatography and electrofocusing. Both steroid-receptor complexes were excluded from a column of Sephadex G-150. Electrofocusing in preparative columns gave reproducible patterns consisting of three peaks for each receptor. The apparent isoelectric points were 5.4, 5.6 and 6.2 for the glucocorticoid receptor, and 5.9, 6.2 and 8.5 for the androgen receptor.  相似文献   

12.
Rat submandibular gland cytosol contained androgen receptor which had a single class of specific binding and an apparent dissociation constant of (1.1-1.2) X 10(-9) M. The process of transformation was investigated by a slightly modified minicolumn method in which the transformed receptor complexes were separated from the nontransformed receptor and meroreceptor. 10 mM ATP or pyrophosphate at 0 degrees C induced transformation of androgen receptor as did heat or salt treatment. 20 mM of sodium molybdate completely inhibited transformation that resulted from ATP, heat or salt treatment. The nontransformed androgen receptor complexes sedimented at 8 S and eluted at 250-260 mM KCl from DEAE-Sephacel, and its molecular weight was found to be 220 000 on Sephacryl S300 gel chromatography. On the other hand, the transformed androgen receptor complexes sedimented at 4.1-4.3 S (ATP or KCl treatment) or 3.5-3.8 S (heat treatment) and eluted at 60-80 mM KCl from DEAE-Sephacel. The molecular weight of the transformed androgen receptor complexes was 80 000-85 000 (ATP or KCl treatment) or 70 000-80 000 (heat treatment). These results suggest that the transformation of androgen-receptor complexes from rat submandibular gland was induced by the subunit dissociation and that salt bridges may be involved in the subunit interaction.  相似文献   

13.
Molybdate-stabilized, unactivated rat hepatic glucocorticoid-receptor complexes were purified by a three-step procedure which includes affinity chromatography, gel filtration and anion exchange chromatography. Following elution of unactivated steroid-receptor complexes from the final DEAE-cellulose column, RNA which remained bound to the anion exchange resin was eluted with 1 M KCl. This RNA was small and heterogeneous in size. Equivalent amounts of RNA were detected after a mock purification which was devoid of receptors, suggesting that the presence of this RNA is not dependent on that of receptors. Both a [32P]DNA complementary to the RNA eluted from DEAE-cellulose and a [32P]DNA probe synthesized from total rat liver RNA gave similar results when hybridized to total rat liver RNA. These data indicated that the RNA which co-purified with unactivated receptors through the first two steps was very similar to total RNA in overall composition. Virtually identical hybridization patterns were also detected when end-labeled probes generated from the DEAE-cellulose eluted RNA or total liver RNA were hybridized to total genomic rat DNA, suggesting that the RNA eluted from the anion exchange resin is not specific or unique. Although these results do not exclude the possibility that there could be specific RNA species associated with the unactivated glucocorticoid receptor, they do indicate that the majority of the RNA eluted from DEAE-cellulose following elution of receptor complexes appears indistinguishable from total rat liver RNA and can be detected in parallel mock purifications.  相似文献   

14.
The cytosolic glucocorticoid receptor of 21st gestational day rat epiphyseal chondrocytes has been evaluated. The receptor, a single class of glucocorticoid binding component approached saturation, utilizing [3H]triamcinolone acetonide ([3H]TA) as the radiolabeled ligand, at approximately 1.8-2.0 x 10(-8) M. The dissociation constant (Kd) reflected high-affinity binding, equaling 4.0 +/- 1.43 x 10(-9) M (n = 7) for [3H]TA. The concentration of receptor estimated from Scatchard analysis was approximately 250 fmol/mg cytosolic protein and when calculated on a sites/cell basis equalled 5800 sites/cell. The relative binding affinities of steroid for receptor were found to be triamcinolone acetonide greater than corticosterone greater than hydrocortisone greater than progesterone greater than medroxyprogesterone acetate much greater than 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone much greater than testosterone greater than 17 beta-estradiol. Cytosolic preparations activated in vitro by warming (25 degrees C for 20 min) were shown to exhibit an increased affinity for DNA-cellulose. 46% of the total specifically bound activated ligand-receptor complex was bound to DNA-cellulose. Cytosol maintained at 0-4 degrees C in the presence of 10 mM molybdate or activated in vitro in the presence of molybdate, bound to DNA-cellulose at 8 and 10% respectively. DEAE-Sephadex elution profiles of the nonactivated receptor were indicative of a single binding moiety which eluted from the columns at 0.4 M KCl. Elution profiles of activated receptor were suggestive of an activation induced receptor lability. The 0.4 M KCl peak was diminished, while a concomitant increase in the 0.2 M KCl peak was only modestly discernible. Evaluation of endogenous proteolytic activity in chondrocyte cytosol using [methyl-14C]casein as substrate show a temperature-dependent proteolytic activity with a pH optimum of 5.9-6.65. The proteolytic activity was susceptible to heat inactivation and was inhibitable, by 20 mM EDTA. The sedimentation coefficient of the nonactivated receptor was 9.3s (n = 6) on sucrose density gradients and exhibited steroid specificity and a resistance to activation induced molecular alterations when incubated in the presence of 10 mM molybdate. Receptor activation in vitro, in the absence of molybdate induced an increased receptor susceptibility to proteolytic attack and/or enhanced ligand receptor dissociation as evidenced by a diminution of the 9.3s binding form without a concomitant increase in 5s or 3s receptor fragments.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of [3H]corticosterone and [3H]dexamethasone to soluble macromolecules in cytosol of the hippocampal region of the brain has been studied in adrenalectomized male rats. Unlabeled dexamethasone appears to be a less effective competitor than corticosterone in the binding of [3H]corticosterone, while both unlabeled steroids compete equally well for the binding or [3H]dexamethasone. Further investigation of macromolecular complexes with [3H]dexamethasone and [3H]corticosterone revealed that they differ from each other in their behavior during ammonium sulfate precipitation, BioRad A-5M gel permeation chromatography, DE-52 anion exchange chromatography and DNA-cellulose chromatography. (1) After exposure to a 33% ammonium sulfate solution relatively more [3H]dexamethasone complex than [3H]corticosterone complex is precipitated. (2) Treatment of the cytosol with 0.3 M KCl gives disaggregation of the supramolecular 3H-labeled corticoid complexes which are seen eluting with the void volume during gel permeation chromatography on Biorad A-5M at low ionic strength. In 0.3 M KCl, the [3H]dexamethasone complex has an elution volume somewhat smaller than that of bovine serum albumin, while the [3H]-corticosterone complex in 0.3 M KCl is too unstable to survive chromatography with A-5M. (3) Chromatography on DE-52 resolved the 3H-labeled corticoid complexes into three binding components. The complex with [3H]dexamethasone contains a higher percentage (85%) of a component less firmly attached (i.e. eluted by 0.15 M KCl) to the anion exchange resin than is observed for the complex with [3H]corticosterone (49%). (4) The complexes with 3H-labeled corticoids display an enhanced affinity for calf thymus DNA adsorbed to cellulose following "activation", warming to 25 degrees C for 15 min. Concurrently, a fraction of the [3H]dexamethasone complex becomes able to more firmly attach to the DE-52 anion exchange resin. These results with the binding of the cytosol hormone-receptor complexes to DNA-cellulose do not explain the marked in vivo preference of hippocampus for the cell nuclear uptake of [3H] corticosterone. However, the other differences in the properties of the complexes formed with the two labeled glucocorticoids support our previous inference that there may be more than one population of adrenal steroid "receptors" in brain tissue.  相似文献   

16.
The hydrophobicity of the nontransformed and transformed androgen receptor from rat submandibular gland and heat shock protein 90 (hsp90) from rat submandibular gland and liver was characterized by using high-performance hydrophobic-interaction chromatography on TSK gel Ether-5PW. In the absence of molybdate, cytosol [3H]R1881-androgen receptor complexes were mainly eluted in the 1.3 M region (Peak 1) with a small peak in the 0.8 M region (Peak 2) of a descending salt gradient (2 to 0 M) of ammonium sulfate. In the presence of molybdate, Peak 2 was predominant. When labeled-cytosol was applied after being heated at 25 degrees C for 30 min, a third peak (Peak 3) at around 0.64 M ammonium sulfate was newly observed. Peaks 2 and 3 were observed, while Peak 1 completely disappeared with the labeled-cytosol precipitated at 40% saturated ammonium sulfate. The Stokes radius of Peak 1 was 7 nm, and of Peak 2 was 8 nm. Both peaks were retained poorly by DNA-cellulose but bound rather well to DEAE-cellulose. These results suggest that these two peaks represent the nontransformed receptor, indicating that there are isoforms of the nontransformed androgen receptor which are distinguished by their hydrophobic properties and Stokes radii. Peak 3 had a Stokes radius of 5 nm and preferentially bound to DNA-cellulose, suggesting that this peak corresponds to the transformed receptor. These results indicated that the transformation of the androgen receptor accompanies the enrichment of the hydrophobicity of the receptor molecule. Hsp90 purified from rat livers and hsp90 in the cytosol both from livers and submandibular glands were eluted from Ether-5PW at 0.8 M ammonium sulfate, at almost the same position as Peak 2. This finding suggests that the enrichment of hydrophobicity on transformation is due to dissociation of hsp90 from the nontransformed androgen receptor.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of temperature on the kinetics of activation were studied in [3H]triamcinolone acetonide[( 3H]TA)-labeled cytosol preparations from mouse whole brain. After removal of unbound [3H]TA and molybdate (which prevents activation) from the unactivated steroid-receptor complex by gel exclusion chromatography, activation was initiated by incubation at 6-30 degrees C for 0.75-24 min and then rapidly quenched at -5 degrees C with Na2MoO4 (20 mM final concentration). The loss of the 9.2S (unactivated) form of the [3H]TA-receptor complex and the concomitant formation of the 3.8S (activated) form increased dramatically with increases in the activation temperature. These hydrodynamic changes were correlated directly with rapid time- and temperature-dependent increases in the binding of [3H]TA-labeled cytosol to DNA-cellulose (DNA-C). Further analyses of these data revealed a greater than 50-fold increase in the apparent first-order rate constant for the increased binding to DNA-C as the activation temperature was increased from 6 degrees C to 30 degrees C. An Arrhenius plot of these temperature-dependent kinetic constants revealed an energy of activation of 116 kJ. These data support a proposed model for activation of the glucocorticoid-receptor complex that includes the splitting of a 297 kDa, unactivated species into a 92 kDa, activated species.  相似文献   

18.
When soluble steroid-receptor complexes are exposed to DNA-cellulose only activated complexes bind. The specificity of the binding was shown by its dependence on the presence of hormone during activation. However, prolonged incubation of non-activated steroid-receptor complexes with DNA-cellulose led to a progressive activation of these complexes. When the same hepatic cytosol containing heat-activated [3H]triamcinolone acetonide-receptor complexes was titrated by high concentrations of nuclei or DNA-cellulose the former bound 75% of the complexes, the later only 40%. This decreased binding was due on the one hand to a lower initial interaction between DNA-cellulose and activated complexes than between nuclei and these complexes and on the other hand to increased losses during washes when DNA-cellulose was used. For these reasons nuclei and not DNA-cellulose should be used when accurate measurements of the concentration of activated complexes are required. When only comparative data are needed DNA-cellulose may, however, be employed.  相似文献   

19.
A comparison of the physicochemical properties between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate- and 0.4 M KCl-extracted nuclear glucocorticoid receptors has been made utilizing HeLa S3 cells as a source of receptor. Both pyridoxal 5'-phosphate/NaBH4-reduced and 0.4 M KCl-extracted receptors sedimented as approximately 3.5-4.5 S species in 5-20% sucrose gradients containing 0, 0.15, and 0.4 M KCl. Under low-ionic-strength buffer conditions, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-extracted receptor elutes close to the void volume of a Sephacryl S-300 gel-exclusion column. Increasing the [KCl] of the column to 0.4 M resulted in the elution of receptor with a Stokes radius of 58 A and calculated Mr = 96,000. Nuclear receptors extracted with 0.4 M KCl also formed a large-molecular-weight complex which eluted close to the void volume of the gel-exclusion column. Increasing the [KCl] to 0.4 M had the effect of shifting this receptor form to a species which had a Stokes radius of 62 A and calculated Mr = 89,700. Ion-exchange analysis of nuclear-extracted receptors revealed that 0.4 M KCl-extracted receptors exhibited considerable charge heterogeneity, whereas pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-extracted receptors did not. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-extracted receptors (approximately 86%) eluted from DEAE-cellulose at a [KCl] greater than 0.15 M; approximately 14% of the receptors had little affinity for DEAE-cellulose. Pyridoxal phosphate-treated receptors had little affinity for hydroxylapatite, phosphocellulose, and DNA-cellulose. The predominant form of 0.4 M KCl-extracted nuclear receptors (approximately 78%) eluted from DEAE-cellulose between 0.05 and 0.15 M KCl, a position coincident with "activated" glucocorticoid receptors. The remaining receptor fraction (approximately 22%) eluted from DEAE-cellulose at a [KCl] greater than 0.15 M, a position coincident with "unactivated" glucocorticoid receptors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The contention that transformation of steroid-receptor complexes is represented by dissociation of receptor oligomers was tested by comparing sedimentation and DNA binding properties of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes from HeLa cell cytosol under several conditions. Transformation of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes could be induced by heat, and/or salt treatment of cytosolic extracts, but not by dilution. Heat-induced transformation of receptor complexes was also confirmed by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Analysis of cytosolic extracts showed that sedimentation and DNA binding properties of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes did not correlate. Both oligomeric and monomeric receptor complexes, in fact, were found to be either transformed, or untransformed, depending on the treatments cytosolic extracts underwent, before being subjected to analysis. We then concluded that release of glucocorticoid receptor monomers cannot account for their transformation to a DNA-binding form in vitro, and suggested that exposure of positive charges on the surface of receptors in the course of transformation occurs in some region of the glucocorticoid receptor which is not involved in interactions between the proteinaceous components of oligomers.  相似文献   

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