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1.
Previous gel filtration binding assay studies indicated that rat vascular smooth muscle cells contained corticoid receptor I and corticoid receptor II sites which could be distinguished on the basis of their relative affinities for aldosterone and dexamethasone. Ion-exchange chromatography experiments were designed to separate the two sites for further studies on their physical characteristics and role in vascular smooth muscle cell physiology. Cultured aortic cells were incubated with 5-10 nM 3H steroid alone or in the presence of 10-fold non-radioactive steroid competitor for 30 min at 37 degrees C. Following cell lysis, total cellular protein-bound steroid was isolated using Sephadex G-25 and applied to a DEAE-cellulose ion-exchange column. Three peaks of radioactivity were eluted using a 1-200 mM sodium phosphate gradient: peak I (30-38 mM), peak II (52-64 mM), and peak III (92-102 mM). Peaks I and II contained 60% of the eluted radioactivity and exhibited the same steroid specificity as corticoid receptor II sites (dexamethasone greater than aldosterone). Peak III contained 40% of the eluted radioactivity and exhibited the same steroid specificity as corticoid receptor I sites (aldosterone greater than dexamethasone). These studies support the binding assay data on steroid specificity and relative proportion of type I and II sites. They also document the existence of type I and II corticoid receptors with different physicochemical characteristics in rat aortic smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

2.
We have utilized unactivated rat hepatic glucocorticoid receptor complexes purified to near homogeneity by a three-step scheme which includes affinity chromatography, gel filtration and anion exchange chromatography, to demonstrate for the first time that ATP can interact directly with the receptor protein in stimulating activation. This stimulation is reflected by an increase in DNA-cellulose binding as well as by a shift in the elution profile of the purified receptor complexes from DEAE-cellulose. A concentration of 10 mM Na2MoO4 is able to block both of these effects. ATP stimulates activation in a dose-dependent manner (maximally at 10 mM), and elicits maximal activation within 30 min at 15 degrees C. There appears to be no nucleotide specificity since GTP, CTP and UTP, as well as ADP and GDP also stimulate activation. All of these observations closely parallel data obtained from similar activation experiments performed with crude rat hepatic receptors. ATP does not appear to stimulate activation of receptors (crude or purified) by initiating a phosphorylation reaction since hydrolysis-resistant analogues of ATP are also effective. Pyrophosphate (PPi) is as effective as ATP in promoting receptor activation, since it elicits similar increases in DNA-cellulose binding, shifts in elution patterns from DEAE-cellulose, and dose-response relationships. None of the compounds tested stimulate activation indirectly by pH or ionic strength effects. Despite the fact that high ATP concentrations (3-4-fold higher than those present in vivo) are necessary to stimulate maximal activation, a physiological role of ATP in directly regulating in vivo activation of glucocorticoid receptors cannot be ruled out.  相似文献   

3.
The relationship between glucocorticoid receptor subunit dissociation and activation was investigated by DEAE-cellulose and DNA-cellulose chromatography of monomeric and multimeric [3H]triamcinolone acetonide ([3H]TA)-labeled IM-9 cell glucocorticoid receptors. Multimeric (7-8 nm) and monomeric (5-6 nm) complexes were isolated by Sephacryl S-300 chromatography. Multimeric complexes did not bind to DNA-cellulose and eluted from DEAE-cellulose at a salt concentration (0.2 M KCl) characteristic of unactivated steroid-receptor complexes. Monomeric [3H]TA-receptor complexes eluted from DEAE-cellulose at a salt concentration (20 mM KCl) characteristic of activated steroid-receptor complexes. However, only half of these complexes bound to DNA-cellulose. This proportion could not be increased by heat treatment, addition of bovine serum albumin, or incubation with RNase A. Incubation of monomeric complexes with heat inactivated cytosol resulted in a 2-fold increase in DNA-cellulose binding. Unlike receptor dissociation, this increase was not inhibited by the presence of sodium molybdate. Fractionation of heat inactivated cytosol by Sephadex G-25 chromatography demonstrated that the activity responsible for the increased DNA binding of monomeric [3H]TA-receptor complexes was macromolecular. These results are consistent with a two-step model for glucocorticoid receptor activation, in which subunit dissociation is a necessary but insufficient condition for complete activation. They also indicate that conversion of the steroid-receptor complex to the low-salt eluting form is a reflection of receptor dissociation but not necessarily acquisition of DNA-binding activity.  相似文献   

4.
A majority of the untransformed glucocorticoid-receptor complexes (GRc) from rat liver cytosol sedimented in the 9S region in 5-20% sucrose gradients containing 0.15 M KCl and 20 mM Na2MoO4. Incubation of the cytosol at 23 degrees C, or at 0 degree C with 10 mM ATP or 0.3 M KCl caused appearance of a slower migrating (4S) form which exhibited an increased affinity toward DNA-cellulose and ATP-Sepharose. Presence of 20 mM Na2MoO4 blocked this 9S to 4S transformation of GRc. A complete conversion of the 9S to the 4S form occurred upon a 2 h incubation of GRc with 10 mM ATP at 0 degree C. Other nucleoside triphosphates (GTP, CTP, and UTP), ADP and PPi (but not AMP or cAMP) were also effective in transforming the 9S form. The heat transformation occurred in a time-dependent manner and was complete within 1 h at 23 degrees C; presence of 10 mM ATP during this 23 degrees C incubation period allowed a complete 9S to 4S alteration in 10-20 min. Addition of ATP also accelerated the rate of salt activation of the GRc; a 50% conversion to the 4S form occurred in 20 min or 3 min in the absence or the presence of 10 mM ATP during the 0 degree C incubation of GRc with 0.15 M KCl. An absolute requirement of the hormone for 9S to 4S transformation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) was evident, as no conversion of the 9S form to the 4S form could be achieved with the ligand-free GR under any of the above conditions. Incubation of cytosol preparations at 23 degrees C or at 0 degree C with KCl or ATP caused dissociation of the GRc and reduced the steroid binding capacity of GR. Although aurintricarboxylic acid, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, Na2MoO4, Na2WO4, o-phenanthroline, Rifamycin AF/013 and heparin inhibited the ATP-Sepharose and DNA binding of the GRc, only Na2MoO4 and Na2WO4 selectively blocked the 9S to 4S conversion. We suggest that the 9S to 4S transformation in vitro of rat liver GRc represents an acquisition of DNA and ATP-Sepharose binding ability and may involve a separation of subunits from an oligomeric receptor structure.  相似文献   

5.
A new glucocorticoid-binding protein (Peak C) eluted with 0.14 M NaCl on DEAE-cellulose chromatography was identified previously in the rats subjected to stress or treated with glucocorticoid (100 micrograms/100 g body wt.), while the 'classic' glucocorticoid receptor (Peak B) eluted with 0.07 M NaCl was found predominantly in untreated rats. The new glucocorticoid-binding protein, Peak C, was characterized by Scatchard analysis and competition with other steroids as a glucocorticoid receptor. The saturation curve of Peak C for dexamethasone was sigmoidal, whereas that of Peak B was hyperbolic. The Hill coefficient was 1.0 for Peak B and 3.1 for Peak C. These results show that Peak C has multiple binding sites. Peak C bound specifically to only natural or synthetic glucocorticoids, whereas Peak B bound not only to glucocorticoids but also to progesterone and aldosterone. Peak C was far more labile than Peak B, its binding activity decreasing 80% when it was incubated for 30 min at 25 degrees C. The molecular sizes of these two peaks (B and C) were similar, being about 90 000-100 000 as determined by Sepharose 6B column chromatography at high ionic strength (0.34 M KCl). The hormone-receptor complex of Peak C bound to rat liver chromatin specifically, but did not bind to calf thymus DNA. The complex of Peak B bound to not only the chromatin but also calf thymus DNA. Peak B reacted well with antiserum to the 'classic' glucocorticoid receptor, but Peak C did not react with this antiserum. These results indicate that Peak C is a different glucocorticoid receptor protein from Peak B, or classic glucocorticoid receptor, and plays physiologically important roles as a glucocorticoid receptor mediating the action of the hormone at a high level.  相似文献   

6.
Cytosolic aldosterone-protein complexes are isolated from rat kidney slices after incubation with [3H]aldosterone and dexamethasone. Activated and unactivated forms of the complex are characterized by gel electrophoresis and hydroxyapatite chromatography after incubation at 4 degrees C and 25 degrees C respectively. It is found that the activated form reaches a maximum after 30 min at 25 degrees C and can be separated as an homogeneous peak by electrophoresis. Intermediate forms can also be identified. In the presence of 10 mM ATP, activation immediately occurs at 4 degrees C and is almost complete. In the presence of 10 mM molybdate, the activation is strongly enhanced and the increase in activated form may be about fifteen-fold whether molybdate is added during kidney homogenization or just before incubation at 25 degrees C. On the other hand molybdate reduces to one third the binding of the aldosterone-receptor complexes to nuclei. In the presence of the steroid RU 26988 which is a pure glucocorticoid, experiments done on aldosterone-receptors complexes and their binding to nuclei are confirmed. This proves that aldosterone is specific for mineralocorticoid sites. The general pattern of the mineralocorticoid receptor activation is discussed and its resemblance to the case of other steroid hormones is emphasized.  相似文献   

7.
Citrate greatly stabilized rat hepatic unbound glucocorticoid receptors in cell-free conditions at 4 degrees C with optimal effectiveness at 5-15 mM. Control receptors were inactivated at 4 degrees C with a half-life of less than 12 h. However, in the presence of 10 mM-citrate, unbound receptors were almost completely stabilized for 48 h at 4 degrees C. Citrate at a concentration of 1-2 mM yielded half-maximal stabilization. The stabilizing effect of citrate was rather specific, as succinate, alpha-oxoglutarate, oxaloacetate, malate and pyruvate had no apparent stabilizing action. Citrate stabilized receptors over a wide range of H+ concentrations, with complete protection between pH 6.5 and 8.5. In addition, citrate appeared to have a significant effect on glucocorticoid-receptor complex activation into a nuclear binding form. Thus 5-10 mM-citrate enhanced nuclear binding, with optimal activation achieved at 10 mM concentration. As analysed by sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation and DEAE-cellulose chromatography, no apparent change was observed in the physical characteristics of the glucocorticoid receptor in the presence of citrate.  相似文献   

8.
Aliquots of rat liver cytosol glucocorticoid-receptor complexes (GRc) were transformed by an incubation with 8-10 mM ATP at 0 degrees C and were compared with those transformed by an exposure to 23 degrees C. The extent of receptor transformation was measured by chromatography of the samples over columns of DEAE-Sephacel. The ATP-transformed complexes, like those which were heat-transformed, exhibited lower affinity for the positively charged ion-exchange resin and were eluted with 0.12 M KCl (peak-I): the nontransformed complexes appeared to possess higher affinity and required 0.21 M KCl (peak II) for their elution. As expected, the receptor in the peak-I exhibited the DNA-cellulose binding capacity and sedimented as 4S in sucrose gradients. Peak II contained an 8-9S glucocorticoid receptor (GR) form that showed reduced affinity for DNA-cellulose. Presence of sodium tungstate (5 mM) prevented both heat and ATP transformation of the GRc resulting in the elution of the complexes in the region of nontransformed receptors. When parallel experiments were performed, binding of the cytosol GRc to rat liver nuclei or DNA-cellulose was seen to increase 10-15 fold upon transformation by heat or ATP: tungstate treatment blocked this process completely. The transformed and nontransformed GRc were also differentially fractionated by (NH4)2SO4: tungstate-treated (nontransformed) receptor required higher salt concentration and was precipitated at 55% saturation. In addition, the GRc could be extracted from DNA-cellulose by an incubation of the affinity resin with sodium tungstate resulting in approximately 500-fold purification of the receptor with a 30% yield. These studies show that the nontransformed, and the heat-, salt-, and ATP-transformed GRc from the rat liver cytosol can be separated chromatographically, and that the use of tungstate facilitates the resolution of these different receptor forms. In addition, extraction of the receptor from DNA-cellulose by tungstate provides another new and efficient method of partial receptor purification.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Exchange assays have been validated to study several forms of the progesterone receptor found to occur in nuclei of rat placenta after extraction with high salt. One form was solubilized by the extraction procedure (KCl extractable Rpn) and another form remained attached to nuclear structures (KCl resistant Rpn). Specific binding of progesterone was optimized in both forms using buffered media containing 0.01 M Tris, 30%-glycerol (v/v), 0.2 mM leupeptin, and 1 mM dithiothreitol (TDGL), pH 7.8, at 0-4 degrees C for 18-24 h. At 0-4 degrees C the nuclear receptors were stable and degradation was negligible even after 44 h of in vitro incubation. The binding reaction between progesterone and receptor demonstrated mass action principles of ligand exchange throughout this interval. Saturation analysis indicated the presence of a single binding moiety of high affinity (app Kd = 2.9-3.2 nM) for both forms of the receptor. However, the nuclear progesterone receptor was thermolabile and after a 10 min exposure to 30 degrees C no longer complexed ligand. At an intermediate incubation temperature of 22 degrees C the binding reaction was stable for about 30 min. The KCl resistant binding sites were markedly more thermolabile. Addition of 10 mM Na molybdate protected all forms of the nuclear progesterone receptor from thermal denaturation and extended the life of the complex 3-4-fold. The dissociation rate constant of progesterone-nuclear receptor complex in each preparation was 6-8 X 10(5) s-1 resulting in a half-life of about 3 h. The KCl resistant and extractable binding sites were sensitive to blockade by 1 mM N-ethylmaleimide which was reversed by co-incubation with a 2-fold molar excess of dithiothreitol. This suggested that reduced sulfhydryl groups located on or near the surface of the ligand binding domain of the receptor were necessary to bind hormone. These studies showed that the interactions between ligand and the KCl resistant and extractable receptor sites found in rat placenta were of high affinity, saturable, and heat sensitive. Thus, these binding moieties exhibited physicochemical behavior very similar to each other and to the placental receptor which has previously been partially purified from the cytosol. The conclusion is made that all of the nuclear receptor binding sites for progesterone are structurally identical. Thus, the distinctive physicochemical properties responsible for KCl resistant and extractable forms of the nuclear progesterone receptor must reside in other domains of the receptor molecule.  相似文献   

11.
The binding of [3H]aldosterone in the chick intestine cytosol was analyzed in terms of affinity and specificity. In this tissue, aldosterone binds to the mineralocorticosteroid receptor, with a high affinity (Kd approximately 0.3 nM) and low capacity (approximately 50 fmol/mg protein), and to the glucocorticosteroid receptor. The selective labeling of the mineralocorticosteroid receptor was achieved by incubating the cytosol with [3H]aldosterone in the presence of RU 486. This synthetic steroid completely inhibited the binding of [3H]aldosterone to the glucocorticosteroid receptor and did not bind to the mineralocorticosteroid receptor. The oligomeric structure of the mineralocorticosteroid receptor was studied by using BF4, a monoclonal antibody which reacts with the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp 90), a nonhormone-binding component of nontransformed steroid receptors. The mineralocorticosteroid receptor sedimented at 8.5 +/- 0.4 S (n = 8) in a 15-40% glycerol gradient. This peak was shifted to 11.2 +/- 0.6 S (n = 5) after incubation with BF4, indicating that, in the cytosol, hsp 90 was associated with the mineralocorticosteroid receptor. Dissociation of the complex was observed on gradients containing 0.4 M KCl, as judged by the absence of displacement by BF4 of the 4.3 +/- 0.4 S (n = 10) peak. The effect of molybdate and tungstate ions, and of dimethyl pimelimidate, an irreversible cross-linking agent, on the stability of the hsp 90-receptor complex was investigated. Complexes recovered in the presence of 20 mM molybdate ions dissociated on gradients containing 0.4 M KCl (5.2 +/- 0.6 S (n = 4), whereas complexes prepared in the presence of 20 mM tungstate ions sedimented at 8.5 +/- 0.4 S (n = 7). Similarly, complexes prepared in the presence of molybdate ions dissociated during high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) gel filtration analysis performed in 0.4 M KCl (RS (Stokes radius) = 3.9 +/- 0.5 nm (n = 3) versus 7.3 +/- 0.2 nm (n = 3) in the presence of 20 mM molybdate ions), whereas complexes prepared in the presence of tungstate ions did not dissociate (RS = 6.9 +/- 0.2 nm (n = 3]. As observed for the tungstate-stabilized receptor, the cross-linked receptor dissociated neither on gradient containing 0.4 M KCl (9.5 +/- 0.1 S (n = 3] nor during HPLC performed in 0.4 M KCl (RS = 6.5 +/- 0.3 (n = 4]. Furthermore, the cross-linked receptor was more resistant to the inactivating effect of urea on aldosterone binding than the noncross-linked receptor prepared in the presence of either molybdate or tungstate ions.  相似文献   

12.
The binding of the natural mineralocorticoid aldosterone and the glucocorticoid corticosterone to macromolecules in rat liver and kidney cytoplasmic fractions was compared by various chromatographic procedures. Equilibration of kidney cytosol with 10nM-aldosterone, either alone or in the presence of a competing steroid, was ideal for ionexchange chromatography of DEAE-cellulose DE-52, and revealed the presence of four sorts of binding components. One of these, eluted in the 0.001M-phosphate pre-wash, and another, less abundant, forming a peak at 0.006M-phosphate, did not bind corticosterone at equimolar concentrations, and appear to constitute the mineralocorticoid-specific 'MR' receptor in rat kidney. They could not be detected in the liver. Radioactivity eluted in the 0.02 and 0.06M-phosphate regions on DEAE-cellulose DE-52 appears to be due to [3H]aldosterone binding to glucocorticoid-specific 'GR' receptors and to transcortin respectively, since labelling was greater with corticosterone even at 10 nM than with the mineralocorticoid at 100nM and since [14C]corticosterone bound to blood serum transcortin was always co-chromatographed in the 0.06M-phosphate region. These two components appear to be identical with those in the liver and could be labelled maximally only by 100nM-corticosterone. The separation between specific mineralo- and glucocorticoid-binding species was less clear when chromatography was attempted on DEAE-Sephadex A-50 columns, possibly because of disaggregation into subunits in the presence of the high KC1 concentrations required for elution. Competitive binding followed by filtration through Sephadex G-200 gel indicated that cellular MR binders, unlike GR receptors, exist mostly as high-molecular-weight aggregates, although both appear to exhibit a comparable monomeric molecular weight of approx. 67000.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The unactivated molybdate-stabilized glucocorticoid receptor (GcR) was purified from rat kidney cortex cytosol (RKcC) by using a modification of the procedure previously described by this laboratory for rat hepatic receptor. The purification includes affinity chromatography, gel filtration, and ion-exchange chromatography. The final preparation (approximately 1000-fold pure as determined from specific radioactivity) was used in subsequent physicochemical and functional analyses. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) showed a single heavily Coomassie-stained band at 90 kilodaltons. Density gradient ultracentrifugation indicated a sedimentation coefficient of 10.5 +/- 0.05 S (n = 2). Chromatography on an analytical gel filtration column produced a Stokes radius (Rs) of 6.4 +/- 0.07 nm (n = 5). The Rs was unchanged when the molybdate-stabilized GcR was analyzed in the presence of 400 mM KCl or when analyzed in the unpurified (cytosolic) state. In contrast, the hepatic GcR was observed to exist as a larger form in cytosol (7.7 +/- 0.2 nm). Following purification, or upon gel filtration analysis under hypertonic conditions, the Rs was similar to that of the unpurified RKcC GcR. Following removal of molybdate from RKcC GcR and thermal activation (25 degrees C/30 min), DNA-cellulose binding increased 1.5-2-fold over the unheated control. Addition of RKcC or hepatic cytosol (endogenous receptors thermally denatured at 90 degrees C/30 min or presaturated with 10(-7) M radioinert ligand) during thermal activation increased DNA-cellulose binding an additional 2-6-fold beyond the heated control.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
A macromolecular material that enhances the translocation, or binding, of already "activated" receptor-glucocorticoid complex to nuclei in the presence of 5 mM ATP was separated from the cytosol of rat liver by DEAE-cellulose column chromatography with about 0.025 M NaCl. The molecular weight of the material was about 93,000 +/- 4,900, as determined by agarose gel filtration. After incubation at 60 degrees C for 15 min, this material still had activity to increase the nuclear binding, but on boiling for 15 min it lost its activity.  相似文献   

16.
The specific glucocorticoid binding capacity in cytosol preparations of rat thymocytes decays with a half-life of 4 h at 0 degrees C or 20 min at 25 degrees C. Phosphatase inhibitors (molybdate, fluoride, glucose 1-phosphate) added alone do not prevent this inactivation. Dithiothreitol (2 mM) has a large stabilizing effect on the binding capacity at 0 degrees C but only a small effect at 25 degrees C. Addition of 10 mM molybdate plus 2 mM dithiothreitol totally prevents inactivation for at least 8 h at 25 degrees C as well as at 0 degrees C. Fluoride (100 mM) also retards the inactivation if added with dithiothreitol. Addition of dithiothreitol at 25 degrees C to inactivated cytosol receptors results in partial activation of the binding capacity. Addition of dithiothreitol to receptors inactivated at 25 degrees C in the presence of molybdate allows total reactivation of the binding capacity to the maximum zero time value. If binding capacity is inactivated by preincubation of the cytosol at 25 degrees C, addition of ATP with dithiothreitol enhances the activation observed with only dithiothreitol. This ATP stimulated activation is optimal at 1 to 3 mM. ATP (10 mM) is required when molybdate is added to prevent simultaneous inactivation. ADP, GTP, CTP, and UTP have some activating capacity but the effects of all nucleotides are inhibited by the ATP analog, adenyl-5'-yl (beta, gamma-methylene)diphosphonate. ATP-dependent activation can also be prevented with 50 mM EDTA, and addition of magnesium partially overcomes the EDTA inhibition. Dithiothreitol activation of thymocyte glucocorticoid binding capacity can also be enhanced by addition of a heat-stable preparation from thymocytes, L cells, or liver. Sephadex G-25 chromatography, assay of ATP, and inhibition of the activation with adenyl-5'-yl (beta, gamma-methylene)diphosphonate suggest that these preparations contain varying amounts of endogenous reducing equivalents and ATP as well as a larger heat stable factor. Maximum activation is obtained by adding dithiothreitol, ATP, molybdate, and the larger heat-stable factor. These results suggest that stabilization and activation of glucocorticoid binding capacity in thymocytes requires phosphorylation as well as reduction of the receptor itself or of some other component required for the steroid binding reaction.  相似文献   

17.
V K Moudgil  C Hurd 《Biochemistry》1987,26(16):4993-5001
Effects of different transforming agents were examined on the sedimentation characteristics of calf uterine progesterone receptor (PR) bound to the synthetic progestin [3H]R5020 or the known progesterone antagonist [3H]RU38486 (RU486). [3H]R5020-receptor complexes [progesterone-receptor complexes (PRc)] sedimented as fast migrating 8S moieties in 8-30% linear glycerol gradients containing 0.15 M KCl and 20 mM Na2MoO4. Incubation of cytosol containing [3H]PRc at 23 degrees C for 10-60 min, or at 0 degrees C with 0.15-0.3 M KCl or 1-10 mM ATP, caused a gradual transformation of PRc to a slow sedimenting 4S form. This 8S to 4S transformation was molybdate sensitive. In contrast, the [3H]RU486-receptor complex exhibited only the 8S form. Treatment with all three activation agents caused a decrease in the 8S form but no concomitant transformation of the [3H]RU486-receptor complex into the 4S form. PR in the calf uterine cytosol incubated at 23 or at 0 degrees C with 0.3 M KCl or 10 mM ATP could be subsequently complexed with [3H]R5020 to yield the 4S form of PR. However, the cytosol PR transformed in the absence of any added ligand failed to bind [3H]RU486. Heat treatment of both [3H]R5020- and [3H]RU486-receptor complexes caused an increase in DNA-cellulose binding, although the extent of this binding was lower when RU486 was bound to receptors. An aqueous two-phase partitioning analysis revealed a significant change in the surface properties of PR following both binding to ligand and subsequent transformation. The partition coefficient (Kobsd) of the heat-transformed [3H]R5020-receptor complex increased about 5-fold over that observed with PR at 0 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The specific glucocorticoid binding capacity in cytosols prepared from L929 mouse fibroblasts (L cells) is inactivated with a half-life of approximately 2 h at 25 degrees C. As previously published, this inactivation can be prevented with 10 mM molybdate and markedly slowed by addition of other phosphatase inhibitors such as glucose 1-phosphate and fluoride. We have now found that ATP (5 to 10 mM) also slows the rate of this inactivation. After extensively inactivating the receptor by preincubating cytosol at 25 degrees C for 4 and preventing further inactivation by addition of molybdate, addition of ATP results in reactivation of the steroid binding capacity. Maximal reactivation of 40 to 70% is achieved with 5 to 10 mM ATP. The activation is temperature-dependent and specific for ATP. ADP, GTP, CTP, and UTP do not cause activation and preliminary results indicate no effect of cyclic nucleotides in this system. If activation is prevented by addition of 10 mM EDTA to the cytosol, addition of 3 to 10 mM magnesium permits ATP-dependent activation of the binding capacity. The level of reactivation can be enhanced by addition of a heat-stable factor prepared from the same L cell supernatant. These results support the proposal that L cell glucocorticoid receptors can be activated to the glucocorticoid binding state by an ATP-dependent phosphorylation mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
Two forms of rat liver aryl hydrocarbon receptor were separated by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose in the presence of molybdate. After labeling for 2 h at 0 degrees C, the receptor separated on the DEAE column into a flow-through peak (peak I) and a peak eluting at 80 mM KCl (peak II). It had been reported previously that exposure to high salt in the presence of molybdate caused the appearance of both 9 and 5-6 S receptor forms. After confirming this, I examined the relationship of the peak I and peak II receptors to these receptor forms. In high salt buffer containing molybdate, the peak I receptor sedimented in the 5-6 S region and the peak II receptor at 9 S. High salt buffer lacking molybdate converted both peak I and peak II receptors to forms sedimenting in the 5-6 S region. In low salt buffer containing molybdate, the peak I receptor sedimented at slightly more than 7 S and the peak II receptor at 9-10 S. Thus, the peak II receptor could be stabilized by molybdate as a 9 S form, and the peak I receptor was converted by high salt from a 7 to a 5-6 S form, despite the presence of molybdate. Most of the peak I receptor bound to a DNA-cellulose column and was eluted by high salt. The peak II receptor showed very little DNA binding.  相似文献   

20.
A new glucocorticoid-binding protein (Peak C) eluted with 0.14 M NaCl on DEAE-cellulose chromatography was identified previously in the rats subjected to stress or treated with glucocorticoid (100 μg/100 g body wt.), while the ‘classic’ glucocorticoid receptor (Peak B) eluted with 0.07 M NaCl was found predominantly in untreated rats. The new glucocorticoid-binding protein, Peak C, was characterized by Scatchard analysis and competition with other steroids as a glucocorticoid receptor. The saturation curve of Peak C for dexamethasone was sigmoidal, whereas that of Peak B was hyperbolic. The Hill coefficient was 1.0 for Peak B and 3.1 for Peak C. These results show that Peak C has multiple binding sites. Peak C bound specificially to only natural or synthetic glucocorticoids, whereas Peak B bound not only to glucocorticoids but also to progesterone and aldosterone. Peak C was far more labile than Peak B, its binding activity decreasing 80% when it was incubated for 30 min at 25°C. The molecular sizes of these two peaks (B and C) were similar, being about 90 000–100 000 as determined by Sepharose 6B column chromatography at high ionic strength (0.35 M KCl). The hormone-receptor complex of Peak C bound to rat liver chromatin specifically, but did not bind to calf thymus DNA. The complex of Peak B bound to not only the chromatin but also calf thymus DNA. Peak B reacted well with antiserum to the ‘classic’ glucocorticoid receptor, but Peak C did not react with this antiserum. These results indicate that Peak C is a different glucocorticoid receptor protein from Peak B, or classic glucocorticoid receptor, and plays physiologically important roles as a glucocorticoid receptor mediating the action of the hormone at a high level.  相似文献   

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