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1.
Hydrogen peroxide and diamide inactivate the steroid-binding capacity of unoccupied glucocorticoid receptors in rat liver cytosol at 0 degrees C, and steroid-binding capacity is reactivated with dithiothreitol. Treatment of cytosol with peroxide or sodium molybdate, but not diamide, inhibits the irreversible inactivation (i.e., inactivation not reversed by dithiothreitol) of steroid-binding capacity that occurs when cytosol is incubated at 25 degrees C. Pretreatment of cytosol with the thiol derivatizing agent methyl methanethiosulfonate at 0 degrees C prevents the ability of peroxide, but not molybdate, to stabilize binding capacity at 25 degrees C. As derivatization of thiol groups prevents peroxide stabilization of steroid-binding capacity and as treatment with dithiothreitol reverses the effect, we propose that peroxide acts by promoting the formation of new disulfide linkages. The receptor in our rat liver cytosol preparations is present as three major degradation products of Mr 40,000, 52,000, and 72,000 in addition to the Mr 94,000 intact receptor. Like the intact receptor, these three forms exist in the presence of molybdate as an 8-9S complex, they bind glucocorticoid in a specific manner, and they copurify with the intact Mr 94,000 receptor on sequential phosphocellulose and DNA-cellulose chromatography. Despite the existence of receptor cleavage products, it is clear that peroxide does not stabilize steroid-binding capacity by inhibiting receptor cleavage.  相似文献   

2.
The specific, saturable, nuclear binding of corticosteroids by rat thymus cells has been studied. Both the accumulation and the retention of corticosteroids by the nuclei of rat thymus cells at 37 degrees C were dependent upon the metabolic state of the cells. Treatment of cells with 2,4-dinitrophenol in the absence of glucose inhibited both accumulation and retention in the cell nucleus; these effects could be only partially prevented by the addition of glucose. The presence or absence of glucose also influenced the level of nuclear binding in the absence of 2,4-dinitrophenol, and in all cases the levels of nuclear binding of corticosteroids were correlated with cellular ATP levels. The effects of other reagents on levels of ATP and cyclic AMP also showed that significant changes in the level of nuclear-bound steroid were always accompanied by parallel variations in ATP levels, although there were no such correlations with levels of cyclic AMP. The partial restoration of nuclear binding by glucose in cells previously treated with 2,4-dinitrophenol was unaffected by cycloheximiede although protein synthesis was inhibited. Possible mechanisms by which the corticosteroid receptor is converted to a form capable of binding steroids by a reaction which requires energy but not de nova protein synthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Glucocorticoid receptor in rat liver cytosol is inactivated (rendered unable to bind steroid) by incubation with calf intestine alkaline phosphatase or highly purified rabbit muscle phosphoprotein phosphatase (phosphorylase phosphate, protein phosphatase C). The receptor is inactivated by both enzymes even when 10 mM sodium molybdate is present. Receptors that are inactivated by phosphatases in the presence of molybdate can be reactivated to the steroid-binding state by addition of dithiothreitol, but receptors that are inactivated in the absence of molybdate cannot be reactivated. These observations suggest that dephosphorylation leads to oxidation of a moiety (-SH) on the receptor that is required for steroid binding. Molybdate apparently preserves the receptor in a form such that reduction returns the receptor to the steroid binding state. We would propose that molybdate may act by complexing with sulfur groups on the receptor.  相似文献   

5.
1. A competitive binding assay was adapted for determination of the specific binding of glucocorticoids to cytoplasmic receptors from rat thymus cells. The steroid–receptor complexes prepared by incubation of a cytoplasmic fraction from rat thymus cells with [1,2-3H2]cortisol or with [1,2,4-3H3]triamcinolone acetonide had rates of dissociation at 37°C similar to those from intact cells. 2. The cytoplasmic receptor was unstable at 3°C, but the rate of inactivation was decreased in the presence of 2.5mm-EDTA. The steroid–receptor complex was stable. 3. Rate constants for association and for dissociation, and association constants, were determined for the interactions of cortisol, cortexolone, dexamethasone and triamcinolone acetonide with the cytoplasmic receptor at 3°C. Differences in the association constants for different steroids could largely be accounted for by the differences in the rate constants for dissociation, but the rate constants for association did not vary greatly; the implications of these findings for the nature of the steroid-binding site are discussed. 4. A cytoplasmic fraction prepared from cells which had been incubated at 37°C under anaerobic conditions bound much less [1,2-3H2]cortisol than did a fraction from aerobic cells, but the binding capacity was restored after exposure of the anaerobic cells to O2. 5. The specific binding of [1,2-3H2]-cortisol to intact thymus cells incubated aerobically was not affected by the presence of 0.1mm-cycloheximide, nor did this concentration of cycloheximide inhibit the recovery of specific binding observed when anaerobic cells were transferred to an aerobic atmosphere. 6. The energy dependence of specific binding of cortisol to the receptor is discussed with reference to possible mechanisms.  相似文献   

6.
Using L cell glucocorticoid receptors that have been immunopurified by adsorption to protein A Sepharose with a monoclonal antireceptor antibody, we have developed an assay to study the requirements for maintenance of steroid-binding capacity. After rapid purification by immunoadsorption, heteromeric receptor complexes retain the ability to bind glucocorticoid hormone. When the receptor complexes are warmed at 20 degrees C, steroid-binding capacity is lost, and the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90) dissociates from the receptor. The rates of both temperature- and salt-dependent dissociation of hsp90 parallel the rates of loss of hormone-binding activity. Molybdate and hydrogen peroxide stabilize the hsp90-receptor complex against temperature-dependent dissociation. Molybdate, however, is much more effective in stabilizing steroid-binding capacity than peroxide. Receptors that have been inactivated in the absence of molybdate or peroxide cannot be reactivated. Inactivation of steroid-binding capacity occurs in the presence or absence of reducing agent, and inactivation is not accompanied by receptor cleavage or dephosphorylation. Under no conditions does an hsp90-free receptor bind steroid. Receptor bound to hsp90 can be cleaved to the 27-kDa meroreceptor in the presence of molybdate with retention of both hsp90 and steroid-binding activity. These observations lead us to propose that hsp90 is necessary but not sufficient for maintaining a competent high affinity glucocorticoid-binding site. Although the 27-kDa meroreceptor fragment is not itself sufficient for a competent binding site, it is sufficient when it is associated with hsp90.  相似文献   

7.
Treatment of rat liver cytosol with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) or sodium molybdate (MoO4(2-)) inhibits thermal inactivation of glucocorticoid receptor steroid-binding capacity at 25 degrees C. Dithiothreitol (DTT) prevents the stabilization of receptors by H2O2. Heating (25 degrees C) of immune pellets formed by immunoadsorption of L-cell murine glucocorticoid receptor complexes to protein-A-Sepharose with an anti-receptor monoclonal antibody (BuGR2) results in dissociation of the M 90,000 heat shock protein (hsp90) from the steroid binding protein. Such thermal-induced dissociation of hsp90 is inhibited by H2O2. Pretreatment of immunoadsorbed receptor complexes with the thiol derivatizing agent, methyl methanethiosulfonate (MMTS) prevents the ability of H2O2 to stabilize the hsp90-receptor interaction. These data suggest a role for hsp90 in maintaining an active steroid-binding conformation of the glucocorticoid receptor.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the potential for the steroid affinity-labeled human glucocorticoid receptor to form both intramolecular and intermolecular disulfide bonds. Glucocorticoid receptors labeled in intact HeLa S3 cells with the covalent affinity label [3H]dexamethasone mesylate ([3H]DM) were analyzed on denaturing 5-12% polyacrylamide gels under both nonreducing and reducing conditions. Under nonreducing conditions the affinity-labeled receptor migrated as a heterogeneous species having an average molecular mass of approximately 96 kDa whereas, under reducing conditions, the receptor migrated as a more discrete form. These data suggest that a reducing environment can influence the structure of the glucocorticoid receptor monomer and further imply that sulfhydryl groups within the affinity-labeled receptor are available for modification. To pursue this observation in greater detail, we tested the effect of oxidizing conditions on the structure of the glucocorticoid receptor. The presence of low concentrations (0.125-0.5 mM) of three oxidizing reagents (sodium tetrathionate, disulfiram, and iodosobenzoate) altered the migration of the affinity-labeled receptor resulting in forms of apparent lower molecular mass (as low as 78 kDa). This altered migration, not seen with most other cytosolic proteins, is consistent with the formation of intramolecular disulfide bonds within the receptor which presumably cause it to assume a folded conformation and migrate faster through the gel. At higher concentrations of these reagents (up to 5.0 mM), we also detect a saturably labeled [3H]DM band which has a higher molecular mass (approximately 140 kDa), indicating the formation of intermolecular disulfide bonds between the [3H]DM-labeled receptor and another closely associated protein(s) having a molecular mass of approximately 40 kDa. The effects which these oxidizing reagents have on glucocorticoid receptor structure are completely reversed upon the addition of dithiothreitol, indicating that the observed changes in migration do not reflect receptor proteolysis but rather a folding and unfolding within the receptor monomeric protein. We have also analyzed the effect of this oxidation/reduction on the function of the glucocorticoid receptor. Oxidation of the [3H]DM-labeled receptor complex with 0.5 mM sodium tetrathionate inhibited activation of receptor to a form capable of binding to DNA-cellulose. This inhibition can be reversed with dithiothreitol at 25 degrees C but not at 0 degrees C, suggesting that these oxidizing reagents are inhibitory at the transformation and/or activation steps.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Treatment of rat liver cytosol containing temperature-transformed, [3H]dexamethasone-bound receptors at 0 degree C with the sulfhydryl-modifying reagent methyl methanethiosulfonate (MMTS) inhibits the DNA-binding activity of the receptor, and DNA-binding activity is restored after addition of dithiothreitol (DTT). When cytosol containing untransformed receptors is heated at 25 degrees C in the presence of MMTS, the 90-kDa heat shock protein dissociates from the receptor in the same manner as in the absence of MMTS, and the receptor will bind to DNA-cellulose if DTT is added subsequently at 0 degree C. These observations are consistent with the conclusion of Bodwell et al. (Bodwell, J. E., Holbrook. N. J. and Munck, A. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 1392-1398) that sulfhydryl moieties on the receptor are absolutely required for the receptor to bind to DNA, and they show that the sulfhydryl-modifying reagent does not inhibit the temperature-mediated dissociation of the heteromeric receptor complex that accompanies transformation to the DNA-binding state. When steroid-receptor complexes that are prebound to DNA-cellulose are exposed to MMTS, the steroid rapidly dissociates, but the receptor remains bound to DNA. Thus, the presence of steroid is not required for the receptor to remain bound to DNA in a high affinity manner. Treatment of cytosol containing transformed glucocorticoid-receptor complexes at 0 degrees C with 20 mM hydrogen peroxide also inactivates the DNA-binding activity of the receptor. The peroxide-induced inactivation is reversed by DTT. Incubation of rat liver cytosol containing untransformed glucocorticoid-receptor complexes at 25 degrees C with hydrogen peroxide prevents their transformation to the DNA-binding form as shown by their inability to bind to DNA-cellulose after addition of DTT. The presence of peroxide during heating of the cytosol also prevents dissociation of the receptor complex as assayed both by reduction in sedimentation value of the receptor and by dissociation of the 90-kDa heat shock protein from the steroid-binding protein. These results strongly suggest that critical sulfur moieties in the receptor complex must be in a reduced form for the temperature-mediated dissociation of the receptor to occur.  相似文献   

10.
A M Traish  D F Williams  H H Wotiz 《Steroids》1989,53(1-2):169-193
The effects of sucrose on androgen binding to its receptor were investigated. Sucrose decreased the rate of thermal inactivation of unoccupied and occupied androgen receptor (AR) and the rates of [3H]5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone [( 3H]DHT) dissociation from both activated and nonactivated AR complexes. Binding of [3H]DHT to AR in vivo, or in intact cells at 37 degrees C, caused reduction of [3H]DHT dissociation from cytosolic and nuclear complexes, as compared to in vitro labeled receptor complexes. Further, exposure of these complexes to sucrose at 0 degrees C caused an additional reduction of dissociation rates. Thus, the decrease of [3H]DHT dissociation induced by sucrose is independent of the reaction that reduces DHT dissociation from activated and transformed AR. Sucrose also reduced the ability of mersalyl acid to inactivate AR complexes. This effect of sucrose was markedly diminished in the presence of 2M urea. Sucrose did not significantly affect the association rate, sedimentation properties, or nuclear binding ability of AR complexes, but it did decrease the equilibrium dissociation constant. Other monosaccharides and disaccharides also stabilized AR. These data suggest that sucrose induces conformational changes in the steroid binding domain of androgen receptor, thereby reducing the rates of inactivation, steroid dissociation, and the accessibility of sulfhydryl groups to mersalyl.  相似文献   

11.
[3H]Triamcinolone acetonide glucocorticoid receptor complexes from human salivary gland adenocarcinoma cells (HSG cells) were shown to be activated with an accompanying decrease in molecular weight in intact cells, as analyzed by gel filtration, DEAE chromatography, the mini-column method and glycerol gradient centrifugation. Glucocorticoid receptor complexes consist of steroid-binding protein (or glucocorticoid receptor) and non-steroid-binding factors such as the heat-shock protein of molecular weight 90,000. To determine whether the steroid-binding protein decreases in molecular weight upon activation, affinity labeling of glucocorticoid receptor in intact cells by incubation with [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate, which forms a covalent complex with glucocorticoid receptor, was performed. Analysis by gel filtration and a mini-column method indicated that [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled receptor complexes can be activated under culture conditions at 37 degrees C. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled steroid-binding protein resolved only one specific 92 kDa form. Furthermore, only one specific band at 92 kDa was detected in the nuclear fraction which was extracted from the cells incubated at 37 degrees C. These results suggest that there is no change in the molecular weight of steroid-binding protein of HSG cell glucocorticoid receptor complexes upon activation and that the molecular weight of nuclear-binding receptor does not change, although the molecular weight of activated glucocorticoid receptor complexes does decrease. Triamcinolone acetonide induced an inhibitory effect on DNA synthesis in HSG cells. Dexamethasone 21-mesylate exerted no such effect and blocked the action of triamcinolone acetonide on DNA synthesis. These results suggests that dexamethasone 21-mesylate acts as antagonist of glucocorticoid in HSG cells. The fact that dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled receptor complexes could be activated and could bind to DNA or nuclei as well as triamcinolone acetonide-labeled complexes suggests that dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled complexes can not induce specific gene expression after their binding to DNA.  相似文献   

12.
The present study demonstrated that at physiological concentrations of insulin bacitracin inhibited the degradation of specifically bound insulin by enzymes located in the rat adipocyte plasma membrane. Bacitracin increased the amount of intact insulin specifically bound to the plasma membrane and potentiated the stimulation of adipocyte glucose oxidation by submaximal concentrations of the hormone. In contrast to agents such as chloroquine, which inhibit lysosomal degradation of internalized insulin, bacitracin was shown by two approaches to inhibit a degradative process localized to the adipocyte plasma membrane. Cyanide and 2,4-dinitrophenol, agents which inhibit energy requiring endocytosis, had no effect on the bacitracin inhibition of cellular degradation of 125I-insulin. Bacitracin directly inhibited 125I-insulin degradation by isolated plasma membranes at similar concentrations and to a similar extent as found with cells. The degradative process inhibited by bacitracin accounted for the majority of cellular degradation of the hormone. The increased 125I-insulin bound to adipocytes was shown to be intact by gel chromatographic analysis and was localized to the plasma membrane by direct and indirect approaches. Bacitracin increased 125I-insulin specifically bound to isolated plasma membranes as early as 2 min. The 125I-insulin bound to adipocytes in the presence of bacitracin was completely dissociable by the addition of 8 microM unlabeled insulin whereas a significant portion of 125I-insulin bound to chloroquine-treated cells could not be dissociated. Bacitracin slowed dissociation of 125I-insulin from the cells. Bacitracin increased the 125I-insulin binding to cells in the presence and absence of cyanide and 2,4-dinitrophenol. Bacitracin potentiated the stimulation of adipocyte glucose oxidation at submaximal concentrations of insulin.  相似文献   

13.
15N-labelled nitrate was used to show that nitrate reduction by leaf discs in darkness was suppressed by oxygen, whereas nitrite present within the cell could be reduced under aerobic dark conditions. In other experiments, unlabelled nitrite, allowed to accumulate in the tissue during the dark anaerobic reduction of nitrate was shown by chemical analysis to be metabolised during a subsequent dark aerobic period. Leaves of intact plants resembled incubated leaf discs in accumulating nitrite under anaerobic conditions. Nitrate, n-propanol and several respiratory inhibitors or uncouplers partly reversed the inhibitory effect of oxygen on nitrate reduction in leaf discs in the dark. Of these nitrate and propanol acted synergistically. Reversal was usually associated with inhibition of respiration but some concentrations of 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) and ioxynil reversed inhibition without affecting respiratory rates. Respiratory inhibitors and uncouplers stimulated nitrate reduction in the anaerobic in vivo assay i.e. in conditions where the respiratory process is non-functional. Freezing and thawing leaf discs diminished but did not eliminate the sensitivity of nitrate reduction to oxygen inhibition.Abbreviations DNP 2,4-dinitrophenol - HOQNO 8-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - CCCP Carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - TES N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl-2-amino ethanesulphonic acid - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulphonic acid  相似文献   

14.
Glucocorticoid receptors have been proposed to undergo an ATP-dependent recycling process in intact cells, and a functional role for receptor phosphorylation has been suggested. To further investigate this possibility we have examined the phosphate content of the steroid-binding protein of all glucocorticoid receptor forms which have been isolated from WEHI-7 mouse thymoma cells. By labeling of intact cells with 32Pi for 18-20 h in the absence of hormone, covalent binding of [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate, immunopurification and SDS-PAGE analysis, the steroid binding protein was found to contain, on average, 2-3 phosphates as phosphoserine. One third of the phosphates were associated with proteolytic fragments encompassing the C-terminal steroid-binding domain. The central DNA-binding domain was not phosphorylated, leaving the other two thirds of the phosphates localized in the N-terminal domain. The phosphate content of various receptor forms from cells incubated with 32Pi and [35S]methionine was compared using 35S to normalize for quantity of protein. In ATP-depleted cells a non-steroid-binding form of the receptor (the "null" receptor) is found tightly bound to the nucleus, even without steroid. The phosphate content of null receptors was two thirds that of cytosolic receptors from normal cells, suggesting phosphorylation-dependent cycling in the absence of hormone. Addition of glucocorticoid agonists, but not antagonist, to 32P- and 35S-labeled cells increased the phosphate content of the cytosolic steroid-binding protein up to 170%, indicating an average increase in the phosphates from about 3 to 5. After 30 min of hormone treatment the phosphate content of the steroid-binding protein of cytosolic activated (DNA-binding) and nonactivated receptors, and that of nuclear receptors extractable with high salt concentrations and/or DNase I digestion, was the same. No change in the phosphate content of the 90-kDa heat shock protein associated with unliganded and nonactivated receptors was detected following association of the free protein with the receptor and following hormone binding of the receptor. Analysis of the unextractable nuclear receptors indicated that they contained less phosphate (60% of that of cytosolic receptors), similarly to null receptors, indicating that dephosphorylation is associated with the unextractable nuclear fraction. The rate of hormone-dependent phosphorylation appeared to be much faster than the rate of dephosphorylation in the presence of hormone, the latter determined by a chase of the 32P label with unlabeled phosphate. Our results show that phosphorylation and dephosphorylation are involved in the mechanism of action of glucocorticoid receptors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The in vitro stability of the Ah receptor from rat hepatic cytosol was evaluated by [3H]TCDD binding studies, gel filtration, and sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation. Thermal inactivation of unoccupied receptor followed first-order kinetics between 5 and 40 degrees C, with an estimated Ea for inactivation of approximately 35 kcal/mol. Protease inhibitors did not reduce and dilution slightly increased the inactivation rate at 20 degrees C. Recovery and 20 degrees C stability decreased with increasing ionic strength. The TCDD-receptor complex was less susceptible to degradation at 20 degrees C, even in the presence of 0.4 M KCl. Specific binding was markedly pH dependent, with maximum recovery at 7.6. Analysis of the pH curve suggested that cysteine sulfhydryl groups may be involved in TCDD binding. Dithiothreitol (1 mM) maximized recovery and 20 degrees C stability, and addition of the thiol largely reactivated binding sites lost from cytosol prepared without it. Removal of low molecular weight components of cytosol by gel filtration resulted in a rapid 20 degrees C inactivation rate that could not be lessened by dithiothreitol. Glycerol (10% v/v) and EDTA (1.5 mM) maximized recovery of specific binding, but both decreased 20 degrees C stability in a concentration-dependent manner. Calcium chloride (4 mM) increased stability at 20 degrees C by approximately 20%, and retarded the characteristic shift in sedimentation coefficient from approximately 9 to approximately 6 S in high-salt sucrose gradients. The fact that sodium molybdate (20 mM) decreased recovery and 20 degrees C stability when dithiothreitol was present but slightly increased stability in its absence suggested an antagonism between the two compounds. Molybdate mitigated the inactivation induced by 0.4 M KCl, an effect which may be related to the observation of dual peaks in molybdate-containing high-salt sucrose gradients. These data indicate that thermal inactivation of the unoccupied rat hepatic Ah receptor primarily may be due to physical rather than enzymatic processes; (ii) sulfhydryl oxidation, removal of low molecular weight cytosolic components, and high ionic strength result in rapid rates of inactivation at 20 degrees C; and (iii) the large degree of protection conferred by TCDD binding implies a very tight ligand-receptor interaction, and as such accords with TCDDs extraordinary potency and persistence in producing its toxic and biochemical effects.  相似文献   

17.
Extraction of rat liver cytosol with 10% charcoal at 4 degrees C inactivates specific glucocorticoid-binding capacity. The steroid-binding capacity of extracted cytosol can be restored by adding dithiothreitol or by incubating with boiled liver cytosol at 20 degrees C in the presence of 10 mM sodium molybdate. Two components of boiled cytosol are required for receptor activation: NADPH and an endogenous heat-stable protein with an apparent Mr of 12,300 by Sephadex G-50 chromatography. This endogenous receptor-activating protein coelutes on Sephadex G-50 chromatography with endogenous thioredoxin activity, and it can be replaced in the activating system by purified Escherichia coli thioredoxin. These observations suggest that glucocorticoid receptors in cytosol preparations are maintained in a reduced, steroid-binding state by a NADPH-dependent, thioredoxin-mediated reducing system.  相似文献   

18.
Sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) is a plasma glycoprotein that binds a number of circulating steroid hormones (testosterone, dihydrotestosterone and estradiol) with high affinity, thus regulating their free concentration in plasma. In addition to binding steroids, SHBG itself binds to receptor sites on plasma membranes with somewhat unusual kinetics. Both the off and on rates are quite slow. The steroid-binding and membrane-binding functions are interwined in what is clearly an allosteric relationship. Occupation of SHBG's steroid-binding site by a steroid inhibits its ability to bind to its membrane receptor-binding site. This inhibition is not related to a steroid's biological activity. Metabolites of steroids without biological activity, e.g. 2-methoxyestradiol, actively inhibit SHBG's interaction with its membrane receptor. However, if unliganded SHBG is allowed to bind to its receptor on intact cells, and an appropriate steroid hormone then is introduced, adenylate cyclase is activated and intracellular cAMP increases. This function is specific for steroids with biological activity, 2-methoxyestradiol has no activity in this arena. These observations demonstrate a potentially important role for SHBG as a regulator of cell function. They also demonstrate an additional mode of action of steroid hormones, one that does not require that the steroid interact with a steroid receptor.  相似文献   

19.
Kinetic analysis of inhibitory action of papaverine, 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) and actinomycin D on RNA synthesis in the intact Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells has shown that the action of these agents is mediated by their effect on the same step of rRNA synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
The properties of serotonin-active sites were studied on peritoneal cells, blood leukocytes and synaptosomes of mice (CBA line). Treatment of cell suspensions with EDTA, ouabain, strophanthin, 2,4-dinitrophenol, dithiothreitol and trypsin demonstrated that serotonin binding by peritoneal cells and leukocytes depends on bivalent ions and K+, Na+-pump operation, requires energy and intact disulfide bonds and is determined by a protein structure. ATP and ADP were found to inhibit amine adsorption by peritoneal cells. These cells specifically bind ATP 10 times more intensively than leukocytes. The data obtained are suggestive of differences in the composition of serotonin-active structures of blood leukocytes, peritoneal cells and synaptosomes.  相似文献   

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