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1.
Two phosphoproteins are adsorbed to protein-A-Sepharose when cytosol from 32P-labeled L-cells is incubated with a monoclonal antibody against the glucocorticoid receptor: one is a 98-100-kDa phosphoprotein that contains the steroid-binding site and the other is a 90-kDa nonsteroid-binding phosphoprotein that is associated with the untransformed, molybdate-stabilized receptor (Housley, P. R., Sanchez, E. R., Westphal, H.M., Beato, M., and Pratt, W.B. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, in press). In this paper we show that the 90-kDa receptor-associated phosphoprotein is an abundant cytosolic protein that reacts with a monoclonal antibody that recognizes the 90-kDa phosphoprotein that binds steroid receptors in the chicken oviduct. The 90-kDa protein immunoadsorbed from L-cell cytosol with this antibody reacts on Western blots with rabbit antiserum prepared against the 89-kDa chicken heat shock protein. Immunoadsorption of molybdate-stabilized cytosol by antibodies against the glucocorticoid receptor results in the presence of a 90-kDa protein that interacts on Western blots with the antiserum against the chicken heat shock protein. The association between the 90-kDa protein and the receptor is only seen by this technique when molybdate is present to stabilize the complex; and when steroid-bound receptors are incubated at 25 degrees C to transform them to the DNA-binding state, the 90-kDa protein dissociates. These observations are consistent with the proposal that the untransformed glucocorticoid receptor in L-cells exists in a complex with the murine 90-kDa heat shock protein.  相似文献   

2.
This paper summarizes our work performed with glucocorticoid-binding complexes in molybdate-stabilized cytosol prepared from 32P-labeled L-cells. In our early work, we showed that cytosol prepared from 32P-labeled L-cells contains two phosphoproteins (a 90 and a 98-100 kdalton protein) that elute from an affinity resin of deoxycorticosterone agarose in a manner consistent with the predicted behavior of the glucocorticoid receptor. Both phosphoproteins are immunoadsorbed onto protein-A-Sepharose from molybdate-stabilized cytosol incubated with a monoclonal antibody against the receptor. The 98-100 kdalton phosphoprotein binds steroid and the 90 kdalton phosphoprotein is a structurally different, nonsteroid-binding protein that is bound to the untransformed, molybdate-stabilized glucocorticoid receptor. The 90 kdalton protein reacts on Western blots with a monoclonal antibody raised against a 90 kdalton protein from the water mold Achlya ambisexualis. This antibody recognizes an epitope that is conserved in 90 kdalton phosphoproteins from rodent and human cells, and it reacts with the 90 kdalton phosphoprotein that copurifies with the molybdate-stabilized, untransformed chick oviduct progesterone receptor. The 90 kdalton nonsteroid-binding phosphoprotein is an abundant cytosolic protein that dissociates from the glucocorticoid receptor when it is transformed, and unlike the steroid-binding protein, it does not bind to DNA. The 90 kdalton phosphoprotein determines the acidic behavior of the untransformed glucocorticoid receptor on DEAE-cellulose. This abundant cytosolic 90 kdalton phosphoprotein reacts with rabbit antiserum raised against the gel purified 89 kdalton chicken heat-shock protein (hsp89). This antiserum recognizes 90 kdalton heat-shock proteins in human, rodent, frog and Drosophila cells. Immunoadsorption of molybdate-stabilized cytosol with antibody directed against the 98-100 kdalton steroid receptor results in the immune-specific adsorption of a 90 kdalton phosphoprotein that reacts with anti-hsp89 antibody on Western blots. These observations suggest that, like the transforming proteins from several avian sarcoma viruses, the untransformed glucocorticoid receptor exists in a complex with the 90 kdalton heat-shock protein.  相似文献   

3.
E R Sanchez  W B Pratt 《Biochemistry》1986,25(6):1378-1382
Two phosphoproteins are absorbed to protein A-Sepharose when cytosol from 32P-labeled L-cells is incubated with a monoclonal antibody against the glucocorticoid receptor: one is a 98K phosphoprotein that contains the steroid binding site, and the other is a 90K non-steroid-binding phosphoprotein that is associated with the molybdate-stabilized receptor [Housley, P. R., Sanchez, E. R., Westphal, H. M., Beato, M., & Pratt, W. B. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 13810-13817]. In this paper we have incubated L-cell cytosol with rabbit antiserum against the mouse glucocorticoid receptor and show that incubation of protein A-Sepharose-bound immune complexes with [gamma-32P]ATP and Mg2+ results in phosphorylation of the 98K steroid-binding protein but not of the 90K receptor-associated protein. Phosphorylation occurs regardless of whether the receptor is unoccupied or is present as the untransformed or transformed steroid-receptor complex. No phosphorylation occurs in the presence of Ca2+ instead of Mg2+. If protein A-Sepharose-bound immune complexes prepared with a monoclonal antibody against the receptor are incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP and Mg2+, neither protein is phosphorylated. If the protein A-Sepharose pellet is obtained from molybdate-stabilized cytosol that has been incubated both with monoclonal antibody to provide the 98K receptor and its 90K associated protein and with preimmune rabbit serum, which causes the nonspecific adsorption of an L-cell protein kinase, then incubation with [gamma-32P]ATP and Mg2+ causes receptor phosphorylation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Glucocorticoid receptor phosphorylation in mouse L-cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
This paper summarizes our observations on the phosphorylation state of untransformed and transformed glucocorticoid receptors isolated from 32P-labeled L-cells. The 300-350-kDa 9S untransformed murine glucocorticoid receptor complex is composed of a 100-kDa steroid-binding phosphoprotein and one or possibly two units of the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90), which is also a phosphoprotein. Transformation of this complex to the 4S DNA-binding state is accompanied by dissociation of hsp90. When receptors in cytosol are transformed by heating at 25 degrees C, there is no gross change in the degree of phosphorylation of the steroid-binding protein. Both receptors that are bound to DNA after transformation under cell-free conditions and receptors that are located in the nucleus of cells incubated at 37 degrees C in the presence of glucocorticoid are labeled with 32P. The results of experiments in which the 32P-labeled receptor was submitted to limited proteolysis suggest that the 16-kDa DNA-binding domain is phosphorylated and that the 28-kDa steroid-binding domain is not.  相似文献   

5.
In order to determine the ratio of phosphates to hormone-binding sites on nonactivated (non-DNA-binding) glucocorticoid receptors in WEHI-7 mouse thymoma cells, we have extracted these receptors from cells grown to a steady state with 32P, labeled them with a saturating concentration of [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate, purified them using a monoclonal antibody, and analyzed them by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing and reducing conditions. The complexes contained approximately 5 mol of phosphate/mol of bound steroid. Only half of the phosphates were associated with the approximately 100-kDa protein which is labeled with [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate. The remaining phosphates were associated with the approximately 90-kDa non-steroid-binding component of the nonactivated complex. Dual label studies, using [35S]methionine to measure receptor protein and 32P to measure receptor phosphates, have enabled us to determine the phosphate content, relative to receptor protein, of both nonactivated and activated cytosolic complexes generated in intact WEHI-7 cells exposed to triamcinolone acetonide at 37 degrees C. The total amount of phosphate associated with the activated complex is roughly half of that associated with the nonactivated complex, the decrease being accounted for by dissociation of the approximately 90-kDa phosphoprotein which accompanies activation. However, the ratio of 32P to 35S counts associated with the approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding protein is the same for the activated and nonactivated complexes. These results indicate that there is no net change in the phosphorylation of the approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding component of the cytosolic glucocorticoid-receptor complex upon activation in the intact cell.  相似文献   

6.
The glucocorticoid hormone receptor (92 kDa), purified 9000-fold from rat liver cytosol by steroid affinity chromatography and DEAE-Sephacel chromatography, was assayed for the presence of protein kinase activity by incubations with [gamma-32P]ATP and the photoaffinity label 8-azido-[gamma-32P]ATP. Control preparations isolated by affinity chromatography in the presence of excess steroid to prevent the receptor from binding to the affinity matrix were assayed for kinase activity in parallel. The receptor was not labeled by the photoaffinity label under photoactivation conditions in the presence of Ca2+ or Mg2+. A Mg2+-dependent protein kinase (48 kDa) that could be photoaffinity labeled with 8-azido-ATP copurified with the receptor. This kinase was also present in control preparations. The kinase could phosphorylate several minor contaminants present in the receptor preparation, including a protein (or proteins) of similar molecular weight to the receptor. The phosphorylation of 90-92-kDa proteins was independent of the state of transformation or steroid-binding activity of the receptor. These experiments provide direct evidence that neither the glucocorticoid receptor nor the 90-92-kDa non-steroid-binding protein associated with the molybdate-stabilized glucocorticoid receptor possesses intrinsic Ca2+- or Mg2+-dependent protein kinase activity.  相似文献   

7.
Glucocorticoid-sensitive L-cells were cultured for 18 h in the presence of [32P]orthophosphate and steroid-binding proteins of cytosol were separated by affinity chromatography and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing. Cytosol contains a major phosphoprotein of Mr = 92,000 and a minor phosphoprotein of Mr = 100,000, both of which bind glucocorticoids in a stereospecific, high affinity manner and have the same Mr as glucocorticoid receptor species that have been covalently labeled with the site-specific affinity ligand [3H] 9 alpha-fluoro-16-methyl-11 beta,17 alpha,21-trihydroxypregna-1, 4-diene-3,20-dione 21-mesylate. Cytosol from 32P-labeled, glucocorticoid-resistant L-cells possessing 5% of the steroid-binding capacity of sensitive cells contains very little of the Mr = 92,000 phosphoprotein and none of the Mr = 100,000 phosphoprotein. These observations provide strong evidence that the glucocorticoid receptor is phosphorylated by intact L-cells. The Mr = 92,000 protein is phosphorylated on serine and it can be resolved into two species using isoelectric focusing, consistent with the proposal that there is more than 1 phosphorylated serine/steroid-binding unit. The glucocorticoid-resistant L-cell line produces a unique phosphoprotein of Mr = 104,000 that is recovered in variable amounts after affinity chromatography. It is not known whether this phosphoprotein is a separate gene product or whether it represents a precursor with weak steroid-binding activity that is not cleaved in the resistant cell to the high affinity, Mr = 92,000 mature receptor form.  相似文献   

8.
The steroid-binding subunit of the glucocorticoid receptor is known to be a approximately 100-kDa phosphoprotein composed of an immunogenic, DNA-binding, and steroid-binding domain. When isolated from WEHI-7 cells, this protein contains between two and three phosphoryl groups per steroid-binding site (Mendel WEHI-7 cells, this protein contains between two and three phosphoryl groups per steroid-binding site (Mendel et al., 1987). To identify the domains that contain these phosphorylated sites, we have analyzed the phosphate content of selected proteolytic fragments of the approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding protein from nonactivated and activated receptors. The approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding protein from WEHI-7 cells grown in the presence of [32P]orthophosphate was covalently labeled with [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate, purified with the BuGR2 monoclonal antibody, digested with chymotrypsin or trypsin, and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Chymotrypsin digestion of this protein yields a approximately 45-kDa fragment containing both the steroid-binding and DNA-binding domains, which contained both 32P and 3H. Trypsin digestion of the protein yields a approximately 29-kDa fragment encompassing the steroid-binding domain but not the DNA-binding domain of the approximately 100-kDa protein, which also contained both 32P and 3H. The 32P/3H ratio of each fragment provides a measure of phosphate content per steroid-binding site and indicated that each fragment has approximately 30% of the phosphate content of the intact protein. This is sufficient to account for one of the three receptor phosphoryl groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
We have used three methods to measure the stoichiometry of the glucocorticoid receptor and the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90) in L-cell glucocorticoid receptor complexes that were purified by immunoadsorption to protein A-Sepharose with an anti-receptor monoclonal antibody, followed by a minimal washing procedure that permits retention of receptor-associated protein. In two of the methods, receptor was quantitated by radioligand binding, and receptor-specific hsp90 was quantitated against a standard curve of purified hsp90, either on Coomassie blue stained SDS gels by laser densitometry or on Western blots by quantitative immunoblotting with 125I-labeled counterantibody. The stoichiometry values obtained by densitometry and immunoblotting are 7 and 6 mol of hsp90/mol of receptor, respectively. In a third method, which detects total receptor protein rather than just steroid-bound receptor, the ratio of hsp90 to receptor was determined by immunopurifying receptor complexes from [35S]methionine-labeled L cells, and the amount of 35S incorporated into receptor and hsp90 was corrected for the established methionine content of the respective proteins. In complexes from L cells which are labeled to steady state (48 h), the ratio of hsp90 to GR is 4:1. When immunoadsorbed receptor complexes are washed extensively with 0.5 M NaCl and 0.4% Triton X-100 in the presence of molybdate, the ratio of hsp90 to GR is 2:1. In addition to hsp90, preparations of [35S]methionine-labeled untransformed receptor complex also contain a 55-kDa protein that the conclusion that the untransformed L-cell glucocorticoid receptor exists in cytosol in a much larger heteromeric complex than considered to date.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
We have used a monoclonal antibody to purify glucocorticoid-receptor complexes from WEHI-7 mouse thymoma cells. Molybdate-stabilized, nonactivated complexes were found to contain two distinct proteins which could be separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing and reducing conditions. One of the proteins, 100 kDa, was labeled when cytosol was incubated with the affinity ligand [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate. The second protein, 90 kDa, was not labeled. Several lines of evidence, including Western blot analysis of purified nonactivated complexes, indicate that only the 100-kDa protein is directly recognized by the antibody. The 90-kDa protein appears to be purified as a component of the nonactivated complex due to noncovalent association with the 100-kDa protein. Both the 100-kDa and 90-kDa components of the nonactivated complex become labeled with 35S when cells are grown in medium containing [35S]methionine. Using cells labeled in this manner, we have shown that activated (i.e. DNA-binding) cytosolic complexes, formed by warming either in intact cells or under cell-free conditions, contain only the 100-kDa protein. Complexes extracted from nuclei of warmed cells similarly contain only the 100-kDa protein. These results indicate that the 100-kDa and 90-kDa components of nonactivated complexes separate upon activation. Purification of nonactivated complexes from cells grown in medium containing [32P]orthophosphoric acid indicates that both the 100-kDa and 90-kDa components are phosphoproteins which can be labeled with 32P. Therefore, resolution of the two proteins will be essential in order to determine whether the receptor is dephosphorylated on activation.  相似文献   

12.
To determine if activation of the glucocorticoid receptor involves covalent charge modification of the steroid-binding protein, unactivated and activated IM-9 cell glucocorticoid receptors were examined by high resolution two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. As previously reported (Smith, A. C., and Harmon, J. M. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 4946-4951), two-dimensional electrophoresis of immunopurified, [3H]dexamethasone mesylate-labeled, steroid-binding protein from unactivated receptors resolves two 92-kDa isoforms (pI congruent to 5.7 and 6.0-6.5). After activation, the apparent pI of neither isoform was altered, indicating that there had been no covalent charge modification of the steroid-binding protein. Thus, the physicochemical changes observed after activation of the steroid receptor cannot be explained by dephosphorylation or other models which involve covalent charge modification of the steroid-binding protein. This conclusion was consistent with the observation that treatment of immunopurified, affinity-labeled receptors with calf intestine alkaline phosphatase did not alter the apparent pI values or distribution of the steroid-binding protein isoforms. However, chromatography of activated steroid-receptor complexes on DNA-cellulose revealed that only the more basic of the two steroid-binding protein isoforms bound to DNA. Therefore, the charge heterogeneity of the steroid-binding protein may be important in regulating the ability of the steroid-binding protein to interact with DNA.  相似文献   

13.
Dexamethasone 21-mesylate is a highly specific synthetic glucocorticoid derivative that binds covalently to glucocorticoid receptors via sulfhydryl groups. We have identified the amino acid that reacts with the dexamethasone 21-mesylate by using enzymatic digestion and microsequencing for radiolabel. Nonactivated glucocorticoid receptors obtained from labeling intact WEHI-7 mouse thymoma cells with [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate were immunopurified and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The purified approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding subunit was eluted from gel slices and subjected to enzymatic digestion. Trypsin digestion followed by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (reversed-phase HPLC) produced a single [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate labeled peptide. Automated Edman degradation of this peptide revealed that the [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate was located at position 5 from the amino terminus. Dual-isotope labeling studies with [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate and [35S]methionine demonstrated that this peptide contained methionine. Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion of [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate labeled steroid-binding subunits generated a different radiolabeled peptide containing label at position 7 from the amino terminus. On the basis of the published amino acid sequence of the murine glucocorticoid receptor, our data clearly identify cysteine-644 as the single residue in the steroid-binding domain that covalently binds dexamethasone 21-mesylate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Incubation of molybdate-stabilized L cell cytosol with a monoclonal antibody directed against the 100-kDa glucocorticoid-binding protein causes the immune-specific adsorption to protein A-Sepharose of both the 100-kDa glucocorticoid receptor and the 90-kDa murine heat shock protein (hsp90) (Sanchez, E. R., Toft, D. O., Schlesinger, M. J., and Pratt, W. B. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 12398-12401). When the glucocorticoid receptor in cytosol is transformed to the DNA-binding state, hsp90 dissociates. In this paper, we show that temperature-mediated dissociation of hsp90 from the receptor is a hormone-dependent event in the same manner as temperature-mediated transformation to the DNA-binding state. In contrast to temperature-mediated transformation, ammonium sulfate causes both dissociation of hsp90 from the receptor and conversion of the receptor to the DNA-binding form in a manner that does not require the presence of steroid. The untransformed form of the glucocorticoid receptor and the strongly negatively charged hsp90 protein behave similarly on DEAE-cellulose chromatography, suggesting that the hsp90 component may contribute significantly to the net negative charge behavior of the non-DNA-binding form of the receptor complex.  相似文献   

15.
Digestion of the rat liver glucocorticoid receptor with chymotrypsin results in the generation of a 42-kDa fragment which contains the steroid-binding and DNA-binding domains and the antigenic site for the BuGR anti-glucocorticoid receptor monoclonal antibody, while digestion with trypsin generates a 15-kDa receptor fragment containing only the DNA-binding function and the BuGR epitope (Eisen, L.P., Reichman, M.E., Thompson, E.B., Gametchu, B., Harrison, R. W., and Eisen, H.J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11805-11810). In this paper, glucocorticoid receptor of mouse L cells that were grown in the presence of [32P]orthophosphate was digested with trypsin or chymotrypsin (either before or after immune purification with BuGR antibody) and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, autoradiography, and Western blotting. The receptor is endogenously phosphorylated only on serine residues. Chymotrypsin digestion results in a 32P-labeled 42-kDa receptor fragment which contains steroid-binding, DNA-binding, and BuGR-reactive sites. Trypsin digestion generates a 27-kDa steroid-bound fragment (meroreceptor) which is not labeled with 32P and a 32P-labeled 15-kDa fragment which contains both the DNA-binding domain and the BuGR epitope. We have calculated that there are 4 times as many phosphate residues in the intact receptor than in the 42-kDa chymotrypsin fragment. From examination of 32P-labeled receptor fragments, we have deduced that one phosphate is located between amino acids 398 and 447, a region containing the BuGR epitope and about one-third of the DNA-binding domain, and the remaining three phosphates appear to be clustered just to the amino-terminal side of the BuGR epitope in a region defined by amino acids 313 to 369. Treatment of intact 32P-labeled receptor in cytosol with alkaline phosphatase removes these three phosphates, but it does not remove the phosphate from the DNA-binding-BuGR-reactive fragment and it does not affect the ability of the transformed receptor to bind to DNA-cellulose.  相似文献   

16.
We have previously shown that a 50-kDa protein is one component of a heteromeric complex immunoprecipitated by the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90) monoclonal antibodies 8D3 and 3G3 (Perdew, G. H., and Whitelaw, M. L. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 6708-6713). In this report, we compare the 50-kDa protein with that found in pp60v-src-hsp90-p50 complexes immunoprecipitated from Rous sarcoma virus-transformed cells with antibodies to pp60v-src. 35S- and 32P-labeled p50 proteins from each system were identical in their mobilities by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacryl-amide gel electrophoresis. The profile of N-chlorosuccinimide cleavage products derived from each 32P-labeled p50 protein were also identical when resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We have developed a mouse monoclonal antibody, 3M/1B5p50, capable of detecting p50 on Western blots. This antibody detected the 50-kDa protein which co-purified with the pa104 pp60v-src mutant of the avian sarcoma virus oncoprotein in 44A rat fibroblasts. We did not detect p50 in association with native glucocorticoid receptor in L cells or with the overexpressed glucocorticoid receptor in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Two experiments utilizing immunochemical staining implied that essentially all cytosolic p50 is associated with hsp90. Firstly, immunoprecipitating hsp90 from Hepa 1 cytosol with monoclonal antibody 3G3 left the cytosol depleted of p50. Secondly, cytosol fractionated by sucrose gradient revealed that p50 cosedimented with hsp90, confirming the existence of p50 only in association with hsp90.  相似文献   

17.
Several lines of evidence have suggested that glucocorticoid receptor function may be regulated by phosphorylation-dephosphorylation reactions, and it has been proposed that dephosphorylation accompanies activation to the DNA-binding form. The phosphate content of the approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding protein has been determined directly and was found not to change during activation in intact cells (Mendel, D.B., Bodwell, J.E., and Munck, A. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 5644-5648). We have now determined the effect of interaction with the receptor and of activation on the phosphate content of the approximately 90-kDa heat shock protein (Hsp 90), which is thought to be a non-steroid-binding subunit of nonactivated glucocorticoid receptors that dissociates on activation. Monoclonal antibodies AC88 and BuGR2 were used to purify free Hsp 90 and cytosolic nonactivated glucocorticoid-receptor complexes, respectively, from WEHI-7 cells grown in the presence of 32Pi and [35S] methionine. Cell-free activation of the nonactivated receptor-antibody complexes immobilized on protein A-Sepharose minicolumns allowed the recovery of the Hsp 90 dissociated from the complexes during activation. Proteins were separated by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the 32P/35S ratio, which was used as a measure of the phosphate content relative to protein, was determined for the free, receptor-associated, and dissociated forms of the Hsp 90, as well as for the approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding protein of non-activated and activated receptors. The three forms of the Hsp 90 had the same phosphate contents, as did the approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding protein before and after activation. Based upon these results, we conclude that no net change in the phosphorylation occurs when the Hsp 90 associates with the approximately 100-kDa steroid-binding protein to form nonactivated receptors and that neither protein component of nonactivated complexes is dephosphorylated when they dissociate during thermal activation under cell-free conditions.  相似文献   

18.
[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°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°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 aas 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   

19.
The glucocorticoid receptor is present in the cytosol of cell extracts as a large nonactivated (i.e. non-DNA-binding) approximately 9 S (Mr 300,000) complex. Experimental evidence indicates that the purified nonactivated glucocorticoid receptor contains a single steroid-binding protein and two approximately 90-kDa nonsteroid-binding subunits identified as heat shock protein (hsp) 90. Translation of the glucocorticoid receptor mRNA in vitro in reticulocyte lysates produces a large nonactivated glucocorticoid receptor complex similar to that found in cytosols. The cell-free synthesized glucocorticoid receptor is able to bind steroid and can be activated further to the DNA-binding form. To test the hypothesis of an active role played by hsp90 in the stabilization of a competent steroid-binding conformation of the glucocorticoid receptor, we have synthesized the receptor in a reticulocyte lysate that has been depleted of hsp90 by immunoadsorption with AC88 anti-hsp90. Although the translation capacity of the reticulocyte system was reduced considerably upon hsp90 removal, the glucocorticoid receptor was synthesized, and a significant number of molecules were found to bind [3H]triamcinolone acetonide. Chromatography on DEAE-cellulose showed that most of the receptor molecules synthesized in hsp90-depleted lysate had lost the capacity to form an oligomeric receptor complex. Addition of purified rat liver hsp90 to the hsp90-depleted lysate before translation did not increase steroid binding nor did it restore formation of the heteromeric receptor complex. Analysis of [35S] methionine-labeled glucocorticoid receptor molecules synthesized in the hsp90-depleted lysate showed the production of polypeptides differing from the expected chromatographic pattern on DEAE-cellulose. Upon addition of purified hsp90 to the hsp90-depleted lysate, before translation, the 35S-labeled synthesized receptor fractionated on DEAE-cellulose as an intermediate peak between activated and nonactivated receptor forms. The data suggest that hsp90 alone may not be sufficient for the formation of the nonactivated steroid receptor complex.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphorylation of rat liver glucocorticoid receptor   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Rat liver glucocorticoid-receptor complex (GRc) was purified 2000-fold by a combination of methods including (NH4)2SO4-fractionation and phosphocellulose and DNA-cellulose chromatography. The purified glucocorticoid receptor preparation contained a major peptide of Mr = 90,000 and the GRc sedimented as 4 S in 5-20% sucrose gradients. An additional peptide of Mr = 45,000 (45K) was also observed. Some preparations yielded only the Mr = 90,000 (90K) peptide suggesting that the 45K peptide may be a proteolyzed portion of the 90K protein. The purified GRc was incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP in the presence of cAMP-dependent kinase. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the above preparation revealed the presence of two 32P-containing bands with apparent Mr = 90,000 and 45,000. The 32P incorporation was dependent on the availability of divalent cation (Mg2+). GRc in cytosol labeled with [3H]dexamethasone mesylate and purified as above co-migrated with 32P-containing bands. GRc was also purified from cytosol obtained from livers of rats injected with [32P]orthophosphate. Both 32P and 3H bands were associated with 90K and 45K peptides. Our results indicate that rat liver glucocorticoid receptor is a phosphoprotein and that both the phosphorylated peptides 90K and 45K also contain the steroid and the DNA binding regions of the glucocorticoid receptor.  相似文献   

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