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1.
Retinol (vitamin A) is essential for reproduction, and retinoids have been suggested to play a role in ovarian steroidogenesis, oocyte maturation, and early embryonic development. Retinol is transported systemically and intercellularly by retinol-binding protein (RBP). Within the cell, cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) functions in retinol accumulation and metabolism. Since the actions of retinoids are mediated, in part, by retinoid-binding proteins, the objective of this study was to investigate cell-specific expression of RBP and CRBP in the bovine ovary. Immunocytochemical analysis (ICC) localized RBP to the thecal and granulosa cell layers of antral and preantral follicles with the most intense staining in the cells of large, healthy follicles. The tunica adventitia of arterial blood vessels also exhibited RBP staining. Immunostaining of CRBP was most intense in the granulosa cells of preantral follicles and present, but diminished, in thecal and granulosa cells of antral follicles. Within the corpus luteum, both proteins were observed in large luteal cells, but only RBP was observed in small luteal cells. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that thecal and granulosa cells from antral follicles and luteal tissue expressed RBP and CRBP mRNA. Synthesis and secretion of RBP by thecal cells, granulosa cells, and luteal cells were demonstrated by immune-complex precipitation of radiolabeled RBP from the medium of cultured cells or explants, followed by SDS-PAGE and fluorography. Follicular fluid was collected from small (<5 mm) and large (8-14 mm) follicles, pooled according to follicular size, and analyzed for retinol, RBP, estradiol-17beta, and progesterone. Concentrations of retinol, RBP, and estradiol were greater in the fluid of large follicles. Results demonstrate retinoid-binding protein expression by bovine ovaries and provide physical evidence that supports the concept that retinoids play a role in ovarian function.  相似文献   

2.
The distribution and levels of cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP) were measured in rat testicular peritubular and Sertoli cells and in isolated rat pachytene spermatocytes and spermatids. Two Sertoli cell preparations, one containing some germ cells and another that had been osmotically shocked to destroy germ cells, were examined. CRBP and CRABP levels were measured by specific and sensitive radioimmunoassays. Testicular peritubular cell cytosol preparations were found to contain high levels of CRBP (1.48 +/- 0.87 microgram CRBP/mg protein) but CRABP could not be detected. The mean CRBP level in Sertoli cell preparations that contained some germ cells was 0.93 +/- 0.24 microgram CRBP/mg protein; this value was similar to the level of 1.11 +/- 0.20 microgram CRBP/mg protein measured for Sertoli cells free of germ cells. The level of CRABP found in Sertoli cell preparations containing germ cells (0.81 +/- 0.32 microgram CRABP/mg protein) was approximately five times greater than was observed in Sertoli cells free of germ cells (0.16 +/- 0.03 microgram CRABP/mg protein). CRBP and CRABP levels in cultured Sertoli cells were not affected by time in culture for up to five days of culture. Pachytene spermatocytes and spermatids were very enriched in CRABP (0.72 +/- 0.26 microgram CRABP/mg protein for spermatocytes and 0.65 +/- 0.21 microgram CRABP/ml protein for spermatids). A search for a high molecular weight retinol-binding protein did not demonstrate the existence of such a protein in Sertoli cell-conditioned medium. In summary, these studies provide quantitative information about the distribution of the cellular retinoid-binding proteins in the cell types that compose the rat testis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
A study was conducted to determine the levels and distributions of retinoids, retinol-binding protein (RBP), retinyl palmitate hydrolase (RPH), cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP), and cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP) in different types of isolated liver cells. Highly purified fractions of parenchymal, fat-storing (stellate), endothelial, and Kupffer cells were isolated in high yield from rat livers. The retinoid content of each fraction was measured by HPLC analysis. RBP, CRBP, and CRABP were measured by sensitive and specific radioimmunoassays, and RPH activity was measured by a sensitive microassay. The concentrations of each parameter expressed per 10(6) parenchymal or fat-storing cells were, respectively: retinoids, 1.5 and 83.9 micrograms of retinol equivalents; RBP, 138 and 7.4 ng; RPH, 826 and 1152 pmol FFA formed hr-1; CRBP, 470 and 236 ng; and CRABP, 5.6 and 8.7 ng. When these data were expressed on the basis of per unit mass of cellular protein, the concentrations of RPH, CRBP, and CRABP in the fat-storing cells, which contain 10-fold less protein than the large parenchymal cells, were seen to be greatly enriched over parenchymal cells. The parenchymal cells contained approximately 9% of the total retinoids, 98% of the total RBP, 90% of the total RPH activity, 91% of the total CRBP, and 71% of the total CRABP found in the liver. The fat-storing cells accounted for approximately 88% of the total retinoids, 0.7% of the total RBP, 10% of the RPH activity, 8% of the total CRBP, and 21% of the CRABP in the liver. The endothelial and Kupffer cell fractions contained very low levels of all of these parameters. Thus, the large and abundant parenchymal cells account for greater than 70% of the liver's RBP, RPH, CRBP, and CRABP; but the much smaller and less abundant fat-storing cells contain the majority of hepatic retinoids and greatly enriched concentrations of RPH, CRBP, and CRABP.  相似文献   

4.
A study was conducted to explore the effects of retinoic acid, fed to retinol-deficient rats, on the tissue distribution and levels of cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP). Sensitive and specific radioimmunoassays were employed to measure the levels of both CRBP and CRABP. Two groups of six male rats each were fed a purified retinoid-deficient diet supplemented with either: i) retinyl acetate (control group); or ii) retinoic acid (30 mg/kg diet) (retinol deficient-retinoic acid group). The retinoic acid supplementation was begun after 38 days on the retinoid-deficient diet alone, and was continued for 52-54 days. Analysis of the data indicated that only the CRBP level of the proximal epididymis in the retinol-deficient/retinoic acid group differed significantly from (was lower than) the corresponding control level, at the 1% confidence level. CRABP tissue levels did not differ significantly between the two groups. Thus, a moderately large intake of retinoic acid, as the only source of retinoids, had very little effect on the tissue distribution or levels of either its own cellular binding protein (CRABP) or of CRBP. This study provides further information showing that the tissue levels of the cellular retinoid-binding proteins are highly regulated and maintained in rats, even in the presence of marked changes in retinoid nutritional status.  相似文献   

5.
6.
N Noy  W S Blaner 《Biochemistry》1991,30(26):6380-6386
The interactions of retinol with rat cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and with rat serum retinol-binding protein (RBP) were studied. The equilibrium dissociation constants of the two retinol-protein complexes (Kd) were found to be 13 x 10(-9) and 20 x 10(-9) M for CRBP and for RBP, respectively. The kinetic parameters governing the interactions of retinol with the two binding proteins were also studied. It was found that although the equilibrium dissociation constants of the two retinol-protein complexes were similar, retinol interacted with CRBP 3-5-fold faster than with RBP; the rate constants for dissociation of retinol from CRBP and from RBP (koff) were 0.57 and 0.18 min-1, respectively. The rate constants for association of retinol with the two proteins (kon) were calculated from the expression: Kd = koff/kon. The kon's for retinol associating with CRBP and with RBP were found to be 4.4 x 10(7) and 0.9 x 10(7) M-1 min-1, respectively. The data suggest that the initial events of uptake of retinol by cells are not rate-limiting for this process and that the rate of uptake is probably determined by the rate of metabolism of this ligand. The data indicate further that the distribution of retinol between RBP in blood and CRBP in cytosol is at equilibrium and that intracellular levels of retinol are regulated by the levels of CRBP.  相似文献   

7.
In the present study we have examined the cellular localization and developmental changes of mRNAs for retinoid-binding proteins in rat testis. We demonstrate that mRNA (0.7 kb) for cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) is expressed only in Sertoli cells and peritubular cells. The mRNA for CRBP could not be detected in other testicular cells. In contrast, mRNA for cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP) was detected primarily in germ cells and to a small extent in tumor Leydig cells. The mRNA for CRABP in germ cells revealed distinct size heterogeneity and three distinct mRNA species were observed (1.0, 1.8, and 1.9 kb), in contrast to previous data for somatic cells where only the 1.0-kb mRNA has been reported. Messenger RNAs for retinoic acid receptor-alpha (RAR alpha) were detected in both somatic and haploid germ cells. The highest level of RAR alpha was seen in Sertoli cells, round spermatids, and tumor Leydig cells. Lower, but distinct, levels were observed in peritubular cells. Furthermore, we observed germ cell-specific species of RAR alpha mRNA (4 kb and approximately 7 kb). The smallest mRNA for RAR alpha (2.7 kb) in somatic cells was absent in germ cells. The levels of mRNAs for the various retinoid-binding proteins in whole testis obtained from rats of various ages confirmed this cellular localization. The mRNAs for CRBP, the small molecular size (2.7 kb) mRNA for RAR alpha (localized to somatic cells), and the 1-kb mRNA for CRABP showed an age-dependent decrease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the role of Vitamin A (retinoid) proteins in hepatic retinoid processing under normal conditions and during chemical stress induced by 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), a chemical known to interfere with retinoid turnover and metabolism. Three separate studies were performed in wildtype control mice and transgenic mice that lack one or more isoforms of retinoic acid receptors (RAR), retinoid X receptors (RXR), or intracellular retinoid-binding proteins (CRABP I, CRABP II, CRBP I). Body and organ weight development was monitored from 2 weeks of age to adult, and hepatic levels of retinyl esters, retinol, and retinoic acid were investigated. In addition, hepatic concentrations of 9-cis-4-oxo-13,14-dihydro-retinoic acid, a recently discovered retinoid metabolite that has proven sensitive to both TCDD exposure and Vitamin A status, were also determined. Mice absent in the three proteins CRBP I, CRABP I, and CRABP II (CI/CAI/CAII-/-) displayed significantly lower hepatic retinyl ester, retinol, and all-trans-retinoic acid levels compared to wildtype mice, whereas the liver concentrations of 9-cis-4-oxo-13,14-dihydro-retinoic acid was considerably higher. After treatment with TCDD, hepatic total retinoids were almost entirely depleted in the CI/CAI/CAII-/- mice, whereas wildtype mice and mice lacking CRABP I, and CRABP II (CAI/CAII-/-) retained approximately 60-70% of their Vitamin A content compared to controls at 28 days. RAR and RXR knockout mice responded similarly to wildtype mice with respect to TCDD-induced retinoid disruption, with the exception of RXRbeta-/- mice which showed no decrease in hepatic Vitamin A concentration, suggesting that the role of RXRbeta in TCDD-induced retinoid disruption should be further investigated. Overall, the abnormal retinoid profile in the triple knockout mice (CI/CAI/CAII-/-), but not double knockout (CAI/CAII-/-) mice, suggests that a loss of CRBP I may account for the difference in retinoid profile in CI/CAI/CAII-/- mice, and is likely to result in an increased susceptibility to hepatic retinoid depletion following dioxin exposure.  相似文献   

9.
Vitamin A and its analogs (retinoids) regulate adipocyte differentiation. Recent investigations have demonstrated a relationship among retinoids, retinoid-binding-protein 4 (RBP4) synthesized in adipose tissues, and insulin-resistance status. In this study, we measured retinoid levels and analyzed the expression of retinoid homeostatic genes associated with retinol uptake, esterification, oxidation, and catabolism in subcutaneous (Sc) and visceral (Vis) mouse fat tissues. Both Sc and Vis depots were found to contain similar levels of all-trans retinol. A metabolite of retinol with characteristic ultraviolet absorption maxima for 9-cis retinol was observed in these 2 adipose depots, and its level was 2-fold higher in Sc than in Vis tissues. Vis adipose tissue expressed significantly higher levels of RBP4, CRBP1 (intracellular retinol-binding protein 1), RDH10 (retinol dehydrogenase), as well as CYP26A1 and B1 (retinoic acid (RA) hydroxylases). No differences in STRA6 (RBP4 receptor), LRAT (retinol esterification), CRABP1 and 2 (intracellular RA-binding proteins), and RALDH1 (retinal dehydrogenase) mRNA expressions were discerned in both fat depots. RALDH1 was identified as the only RALDH expressed in both Sc and Vis adipose tissues. These results indicate that Vis is more actively involved in retinoid metabolism than Sc adipose tissue.  相似文献   

10.
Free retinoids suffer promiscuous metabolism in vitro. Diverse enzymes are expressed in several subcellular fractions that are capable of converting free retinol (retinol not sequestered with specific binding proteins) into retinal or retinoic acid. If this were to occur in vivo, regulating the temporal-spatial concentrations of functionally-active retinoids, such as RA (retinoic acid), would be enigmatic. In vivo, however, retinoids occur bound to high-affinity, high-specificity binding proteins, including cellular retinol-binding protein, type I (CRBP) and cellular retinoic acid-binding protein, type I (CRABP). These binding proteins, members of the superfamily of lipid binding proteins, are expressed in concentrations that exceed those of their ligands. Considerable data favor a model pathway of RA biosynthesis and metabolism consisting of enzymes that recognize CRBP (apo and holo) and holo-CRABP as substrates and/or affecters of activity. This would restrict retinoid access to enzymes that recognize the appropriate binding protein, imparting specificity to RA homeostasis; preventing, e.g. opportunistic RA synthesis by alcohol dehydrogenases with broad substrate tolerances. An NADP-dependent microsomal retinol dehydrogenase (RDH) catalyzes the first reaction in this pathway. RDH recognizes CRBP as substrate by the dual criteria of enzyme kinetics and chemical crosslinking. A cDNA of RDH has been cloned, expressed and characterized as a short-chain alchol dehydrogenase. Retinal generated in microsomes from holo-CRBP by RDH supports cytosolic RA synthesis by an NAD-dependent retinal dehydrogenase (RalDH). RalDH has been purified, characterized with respect to substrate specificity, and its cDNA has been cloned. CRABP is also important to modulating the steady-state concentrations of RA, through sequestering RA and facilitating its metabolism, because the complex CRABP/RA acts as a low Km substrate.  相似文献   

11.
Lampreys are ancestral representatives of vertebrates known as jawless fish. The Japanese lamprey, Lethenteron japonicum, is a parasitic member of the lampreys known to store large amounts of vitamin A within its body. How this storage is achieved, however, is wholly unknown. Within the body, the absorption, transfer and metabolism of vitamin A are regulated by a family of proteins called retinoid-binding proteins. Here we have cloned a cDNA for cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) from the Japanese lamprey, and phylogenetic analysis suggests that lamprey CRBP is an ancestor of both CRBP I and II. The lamprey CRBP protein was expressed in bacteria and purified. Binding of the lamprey CRBP to retinol (Kd of 13.2 nM) was identified by fluorimetric titration. However, results obtained with the protein fluorescence quenching technique indicated that lamprey CRBP does not bind to retinal. Northern blot analysis showed that lamprey CRBP mRNA was ubiquitously expressed, although expression was most abundant in the intestine. Together, these results suggest that lamprey CRBP has an important role in absorbing vitamin A from the blood of host animals.  相似文献   

12.
Studies were conducted to explore the effects of differences in retinoid nutritional status and of sex on the tissue distribution and levels of cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and of cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP) in the rat. Sensitive and specific radioimmunoassays were developed and employed to measure the levels of both CRBP and CRABP. Four groups of six male rats each were fed experimental diets that differed greatly in the amount and kind of retinoids provided, but were otherwise identical. These groups were comprised of rats that were normal controls, retinoid-deficient, retinoic acid-fed, and excess retinol-fed. A fifth group of six female rats was fed the control diet. Immunogens identical with rat testis CRBP and CRABP, as assessed by radioimmunoassay displacement curves, were found in every rat tissue examined (21 tissues in males, 18 in females). The highest levels of CRBP were found in the proximal portion of the epididymis, the liver, and kidney. The highest levels of CRABP were found in the seminal vesicles, vas deferens, and skin. A significant (p less than 0.01) inverse relationship was found between CRBP and CRABP levels in the different tissues of the male reproductive tract. In both males and females, CRBP levels were highest in the gonads and proximal portion of the reproductive tract and decreased distally, whereas the opposite was true for CRABP. Retinoid-deficient rats showed reduced tissue levels of CRBP; thus, tissue CRBP levels are influenced by diet and retinoid availability. No differences in tissue CRBP levels were found in the rats fed the control, the retinoic acid, or the excess retinol diets. Female control rats had higher CRBP levels than male controls in 4 of 15 tissues compared (liver, lung, thymus, and fat). In contrast, tissue CRABP levels showed no diet- or sex-dependent differences. Only in one tissue, the skin, were differences observed (lower CRABP in retinoid-deficient and in female rats). Thus, CRABP metabolism and levels appear to be minimally influenced by the amount or kind of retinoid ligand available or by sex.  相似文献   

13.
Adipose tissue has been reported to contain relatively high levels of the specific mRNA for retinol-binding protein (RBP) (Makover A., Soprano, D.R., Wyatt, M. L., and Goodman, D.S. (1989) J. Lipid Res. 30, 171-180). Studies were conducted to explore retinoid and retinoid-binding protein storage and metabolism in adipose tissue. In these studies, we measured RBP and cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) mRNA levels and retinoid levels in 6 adipose depots in male rats. Total RNA was isolated from inguinal, dorsal, mesenteric, epididymal, perinephric, and brown adipose tissue, and average RBP and CRBP mRNA levels were determined by Northern blot analysis. The relative levels of RBP mRNA in these 6 anatomically different adipose depots averaged, respectively, 6.3, 6.7, 16, 34, 37, and 21% of the level in a rat liver RNA standard. Retinoid levels in the 6 depots were similar and averaged approximately 6-7 micrograms of retinol eq/g of adipose tissue. Since adipose tissue contains several cell types, the cellular localizations of RBP and CRBP expression and retinoid storage were examined. RNA was prepared from isolated rat adipocytes and stromal-vascular cells. Cellular levels of the mRNAs for RBP, CRBP, apolipoprotein E (apoE), lipoprotein lipase, adipocyte P2, and adipsin were measured by Northern blot analysis. RBP was expressed almost exclusively in the adipocytes and only weakly in the stromal-vascular cells. Both CRBP and apoE mRNA levels were relatively high in the stromal-vascular cell preparations and only very low mRNA levels were found in the adipocytes. Lipoprotein lipase, adipsin, and adipocyte P2 mRNAs were found in substantial levels in both the adipocytes and stromal-vascular cells, but with higher levels present in the adipocytes. Cultured adipocytes synthesized RBP protein and secreted it into the medium. Only adipocytes (not stromal-vascular cells) contained retinol, at levels between 0.65-0.8 micrograms of retinol eq/10(6) cells. These studies demonstrate that adipocytes store retinoid and synthesize and secrete RBP, and suggest that rat adipocytes may be dynamically involved in retinoid storage and metabolism.  相似文献   

14.
A novel cellular retinol-binding protein, termed type three (CRBP III), was isolated from eyes of the bigeye of tuna. CRBP III showed a molecular weight of 15,400, an isoelectric point of 4.80, alpha 1-mobility in electrophoresis, and a lambda max of 350 nm. All-trans-retinol, the endogenous ligand, could be competitively displaced by retinoic acid but not by retinal. CRBP III was differentiated from purified piscine and rat cellular retinol-binding proteins (CRBP) and cellular retinoic acid-binding proteins (CRABP) by its amino-acid composition, electrophoretic mobility, fluorescence spectra and ligand-binding specificity.  相似文献   

15.
Cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP) was detected in cytosolic extracts of dermis and epidermis of neonatal rat skin using high-performance size-exclusion liquid chromatography and was more abundant in dermal tissue. CRABP was purified 1000-fold from an acid-precipitated, 50,000 x g supernatant of neonatal rat skin by ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel, followed by chromatofocussing and hydrophobic-interaction chromatography. The protein had an apparent Mr of 14,800. In chromatofocussing experiments the apoprotein and holoprotein gave different elution profiles, indicating a charge difference between the two forms. The ability of various retinoids to compete with all-trans-retinoic acid for binding to CRABP was assayed: 4-oxoretinoic acid and two synthetic retinoids were effective competitors, but 13-cis-retinoic acid, 3,4-didehydroretinoic acid and the acid derivative of etretinate competed poorly. The binding protein had a Kd for all-trans-retinoic acid of 8 nM using a dextran-charcoal assay, but a higher value was obtained using high-performance size-exclusion liquid chromatography. The holoprotein dissociated rapidly at room temperature and had a half-life of 4.7 min. At 0 degrees C, the holoprotein had a half-life of 200 min.  相似文献   

16.
Rat cellular retinol-binding protein II (CRBP II) is a 15.6-kDa intestinal protein which binds all-trans-retinol and all-trans-retinal but not all-trans-retinoic acid. We have previously analyzed the interaction of Escherichia coli-derived rat apoCRBP II with several retinoids using fluorescence spectroscopic techniques. Interpretation of these experiments is complicated, because the protein has 4 tryptophan residues. To further investigate ligand-protein interactions, we have utilized 19F nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy of CRBP II labeled at its 4 tryptophan residues with 6-fluorotryptophan. Efficient incorporation of 6-fluorotryptophan (93%) was achieved by growing a tryptophan auxotroph of E. coli harboring a prokaryotic expression vector with a full-length rat CRBP II cDNA on defined medium supplemented with the analog. Comparison of the 19F NMR spectra of 6-fluorotryptophan-substituted CRBP II with and without bound all-trans-retinol revealed that resonances corresponding to 2 tryptophan residues (designated WA and WB) undergo large downfield changes in chemical shifts (2.0 and 0.5 ppm, respectively) associated with ligand binding. In contrast, 19F resonances corresponding to two other tryptophan residues (WC and WD) undergo only minor perturbations in chemical shifts. The 19F NMR spectra of 6-fluorotryptophan-substituted CRBP II complexed with all-trans-retinal and all-trans-retinol were very similar, suggesting that the interactions of these two ligands with the protein are similar. Molecular model building, based on the crystalline structures of two homologous proteins was used to predict the positions of the 4 tryptophan residues of CRBP II and to make tentative resonance assignments. The fact that ligand binding produced residue-specific changes in the chemical shifts of resonances in CRBP II suggests that NMR analysis of isotopically labeled retinoid-binding proteins expressed in E. coli will provide an alternate, albeit it complementary, approach to fluorescence spectroscopy for examining the structural consequences of their association with ligand.  相似文献   

17.
[3H]Retinoic acid (RA) and [3H]retinol bind in an unsaturable manner to isolated nuclei from Nulli-SCC1 and PCC4.aza1R embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells. When nuclei are challenged with the same labeled retinoids on their respective binding proteins (CRABP and CRBP), much less binding is observed and the binding is saturable. RA-CRABP does not compete with [3H]retinol-CRBP for binding to specific Nulli-SCC1 nuclear sites, whereas retinol-CRBP (but not apo-CRBP) actually potentiates the binding of [3H]RA-CRABP to these nuclei. The binding of [3H]RA-CRABP and [3H]retinol-CRBP is not dramatically affected by prior removal of the outer nuclear membrane with Triton X-100. However, treatment with the detergent after the binding reaction is complete removes about half of the bound [3H]RA-CRABP and almost all of the bound [3H]retinol-CRBP. We measured specific retinoid-binding activities in nucleoplasmic extracts of Nulli-SCC1 and PCC4.aza1R cells. The only readily detectable specific binding activity in nucleoplasmic extracts from untreated cells was for [3H]retinol in PCC4.aza1R preparations. Nucleoplasmic extracts from Nulli-SCC1 and PCC4.aza1R cells pretreated with RA had considerable levels of specific [3H]RA-binding activity with little or no increase in [3H]retinol binding. By contrast, similar extracts from Nulli-SCC1 cells treated with retinol bound large amounts of both [3H]retinol and [3H]RA. Under the same conditions, PCC4.aza1R extracts also contained [3H]RA-binding activity with no increase in [3H]retinol binding above the high endogenous levels. Although these results might reflect translocation of binding proteins from cytoplasm to nucleus, other interpretations must be considered since we often observed an increase, rather than the expected reduction, in cytoplasmic retinoid-binding protein levels.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The levels of cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP) have been measured in Sertoli cells maintained under different cultural conditions. Sertoli cells were isolated from prepubertal rats and cultured in a chemically defined medium without or with follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), insulin, retinol or testosterone added individually or in combinations. The additions were made at the beginning of the culture or 24 h before the cells were subjected to determinations of CRBP and CRABP by radioimmunoassay. No differences were observed either after 1 or 4 days of treatment. The results obtained indicated that the levels of the two retinoid-binding proteins were unchanged in Sertoli cells in response to hormone and/or retinol administration. To rule out the possibility that the Sertoli cells used in our study were unresponsive to the hormones, lactate production by the cells cultured in the presence of FSH or insulin was measured. The amount of lactate produced under hormonal stimulation was significantly higher than the amount produced in absence of the hormones, thus indicating the ability of our Sertoli cells to respond to the hormonal stimulation.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated the esterification by liver membranes of retinol bound to cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP). When CRBP carrying [3H]retinol as its ligand was purified from rat liver cytosol and incubated with rat liver microsomes, a significant fraction of the [3H]retinol was converted to [3H]retinyl ester. Esterification of the CRBP-bound [3H]retinol, which was maximal at pH 6-7, did not require the addition of an exogenous fatty acyl group. Indeed, when additional palmitoyl-CoA or coenzyme A was provided, the rate of esterification increased either very slightly or not at all. The esterification reaction had a Km for [3H]retinol-CRBP of 4 +/- 0.6 microM and a maximum velocity of 145 +/- 52 pmol/min/mg of microsomal protein (n = 4). The major products were retinyl palmitate/oleate and retinyl stearate in a ratio of approximately 2 to 1 over a range of [3H]retinol-CRBP concentrations from 1 to 8 microM. The addition of progesterone, a known inhibitor of the acyl-CoA:retinol acyltransferase reaction, consistently increased the rate of retinyl ester formation when [3H]retinol was delivered bound to CRBP. These experiments indicate that retinol presented to liver microsomal membranes by CRBP can be converted to retinyl ester and that this process, in contrast to the esterification of dispersed retinol, is independent of the addition of an activated fatty acid and produces a pattern of retinyl ester species similar to that observed in intact liver. A possible role of phospholipids as endogenous acyl donors in the esterification of retinol bound to CRBP is supported by our observations that depletion of microsomal phospholipid with phospholipase A2 prior to addition of retinol-CRBP decreased the retinol-esterifying activity almost 50%. Conversely, incubating microsomes with a lipid-generating system containing choline, CDP-choline, glycerol 3-phosphate, and an acyl-CoA-generating system prior to addition of retinol-CRBP increased retinol esterification significantly as compared to buffer-treated controls.  相似文献   

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