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1.
To circumvent the need for isolated nuclei in studies on activation of estrogen-receptor complexes in mammary gland of the rat, a DNA-cellulose binding assay was employed using a cell-free system. Incubation at 28°C for 30 min of receptors previously charged with [3H]estradiol markedly enhanced their association with DNA-cellulose. Once activated, estrogen-receptor complexes bound maximally to DNA-cellulose within 20–30 min. The temperature optimum for activation was 28 ± 2°C using cytosol preparations. The temperature-induced activation required the presence of both steroid and cytosolic receptors simultaneously. Density gradient centrifugation revealed that, unlike those of uterus, both activated and charged estrogen-receptor complexes of lactating mammary tissue sedimented as a 4 S species in sucrose gradients containing 0.4 M KCl.  相似文献   

2.
This study analyzes the sensitivity of nuclear bound glucocorticoid receptors to solubilization from nuclei by DNAase I and DNAase II. Thymocytes were incubated with 10(-8) M [3H]dexamethasone, [3H]cortisol or [3H]triamcinolone acetonide, without or with 10(-6) M unlabelled dexamethasone, for 30 min at 37 degrees C and nuclei from these cells were digested with either DNAase I and DNAase II. DNAase I for 2 h at 3 degrees C leads to solubilization of 60% of the nuclear DNA and release of 10--20% triamcinolone acetonide-receptor, 30--40% dexamethasone-receptor and 85--90% cortisol-receptor. DNAase II at the same enzymatic concentration solubilizes only 10--20% of the nuclear DNA, but releases 40--50% triamcinolone-receptor, 60--70% dexamethasone-receptor and 100% cortisol-receptor. Release of nuclear bound dexamethasone-receptor by DNAase I parallels the solubilization of DNA, reaching maximum values by 2 h at 3 degrees C, whereas maximal release by DNAase II is obtained within 45 min when DNA solubilization is not complete. When nuclei initially extracted with DNAase I are re-extracted with DNAase II, greater than 65% of the DNAase I residual dexamethasone-receptors are solubilized, whereas DNAase I is ineffective in solubilizing DNAase II residual dexamethasone-receptors. DNAase I solubilizes only 30% of the 0.4 M KCl residual dexamethasone-receptor whereas DNAase II digests over 90% of this fraction. DNAase I extracts of nuclear dexamethasone-receptor chromatograph on G-100 Sephadex as a single radioactive peak just after the void volume, whereas DNAase II extracts of nuclear dexamethasone-receptor chromatograph as two peaks of radioactivity, one which is similar to the DNAase I solubilized receptor and a second broad peak of macromolecular bound radioactivity which is smaller in size.  相似文献   

3.
We have used an in vivo system generating assayable amounts of a specific pre-mRNA to study the relationship between splicing and an operationally defined nuclear matrix preparation (NM). When NM is prepared by extraction of DNase I-treated nuclei with an approximately physiological concentration of KCl (0.1 M), a portion of NM-associated precursor can be spliced in vitro in the presence of ATP and Mg2+ and in the absence of splicing extract ("autonomous splicing"). We propose that the autonomous reaction, which does not exhibit a temporal lag and is half-complete in 5 min, occurs in fully assembled, matrix-bound ribonucleoprotein complexes (in vivo spliceosomes). Extraction of the NM with concentrations of KCl greater than 0.4 M eliminates autonomous splicing but leaves behind preassembled complexes that can be complemented for splicing with HeLa cell nuclear extract. The splicing complementing factor, representing one or more activities present in the nuclear extract and also in the cytoplasmic S100 fraction, is relatively heat resistant, devoid of an RNA component, and does not bind to DEAE-Sepharose in 0.1 M KCl. It exists in the nucleus in two forms; bound to autonomous spliceosomes and free in the nucleoplasm. Biochemical features of the complementation reaction, and conditions for reversible uncoupling of the two splicing steps are described and discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Unlike the unactivated glucocorticoid-receptor complex, the thermally activated glucocorticoid-receptor complex was able to bind to Affigel blue (a matrix previously shown to bind proteins containing a dinucleotide fold region) under low ionic conditions (0.05 M KCl). Glucocorticoid-receptor complex binding capacity to Affigel blue was enhanced by increasing salt concentration. Optimal binding was obtained at 0.15 M KCl and remained at a plateau level up to 0.4 M KCl. In contrast to Affigel blue binding, glucocorticoid-receptor complex binding to nuclei was optimum at low ionic strength buffer, declined at 0.15 M KCl and became negligible at 0.4 M KCl. Interestingly, at physiological ionic strength (0.15 M KCl) both nuclei and Affigel blue bound to the glucocorticoid-receptor complex with almost identical capacity. Glucocorticoid-receptor complexes incubated 45 min at 25 °C (activation conditions) in the presence of 10 mM molybdate were unable to bind to Affigel blue (or isolated nuclei) as expected. The results obtained suggest that Affigel blue mimics isolated nuclei in the binding of activated glucocorticoid-receptor complexes under physiological (0.15 M KCl) conditions. In addition, Affigel blue may provide a rapid and easy method to study glucocorticoid-receptor complex activation and interaction with nuclear acceptor sites.  相似文献   

5.
Rat thymic lymphocytes have saturable, specific receptors for glucocorticoids, which are localized predominantly in the nucleus following exposure of thymocytes to dexamethasone at 37°C. The present results demonstrate the dose-dependent extraction by pyridoxal phosphate of dexamethasone-receptor complexes from isolated thymocyte nuclei. On an equal molar basis, pyridoxal phosphate is considerably more effective than pyridoxal; pyridoxine, pyridoxamine phosphate and 5-deoxypyridoxal are ineffective. The release of the nuclear dexamethasone receptor complex is dependent on the integrity of the C4′ carboxaldehyde group of pyridoxal phosphate as evidenced by the inhibition of extraction of dexamethasone-receptor complexes by either hydroxylamine or semicarbazide. The dexamethasone which pyridoxal phosphate liberates from thymus nuclei is bound to a macromolecule which is of smaller size than unactivated cytoplasmic dexamethasone receptor.  相似文献   

6.
When soluble steroid-receptor complexes are exposed to DNA-cellulose only activated complexes bind. The specificity of the binding was shown by its dependence on the presence of hormone during activation. However, prolonged incubation of non-activated steroid-receptor complexes with DNA-cellulose led to a progressive activation of these complexes. When the same hepatic cytosol containing heat-activated [3H]triamcinolone acetonide-receptor complexes was titrated by high concentrations of nuclei or DNA-cellulose the former bound 75% of the complexes, the latter only 40%. This decreased binding was due on the one hand to a lower initial interaction between DNA-cellulose and activated complexes than between nuclei and these complexes and on the other hand to increased losses during washes when DNA-cellulose was used. For these reasons nuclei and not DNA-cellulose should be used when accurate measurements of the concentration of activated complexes are required. When only comparative data are needed DNA-cellulose may, however, be employed.  相似文献   

7.
When soluble steroid-receptor complexes are exposed to DNA-cellulose only activated complexes bind. The specificity of the binding was shown by its dependence on the presence of hormone during activation. However, prolonged incubation of non-activated steroid-receptor complexes with DNA-cellulose led to a progressive activation of these complexes. When the same hepatic cytosol containing heat-activated [3H]triamcinolone acetonide-receptor complexes was titrated by high concentrations of nuclei or DNA-cellulose the former bound 75% of the complexes, the later only 40%. This decreased binding was due on the one hand to a lower initial interaction between DNA-cellulose and activated complexes than between nuclei and these complexes and on the other hand to increased losses during washes when DNA-cellulose was used. For these reasons nuclei and not DNA-cellulose should be used when accurate measurements of the concentration of activated complexes are required. When only comparative data are needed DNA-cellulose may, however, be employed.  相似文献   

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

9.
(1) Fu5 cells were sensitive to the glucocorticoid inhibition of cell growth and the hormonal induction of tyrosine aminotransferase (but not fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and glycogen synthase). AH-130 and AH-7974 cells were insensitive to both effects. (2) The release of [3H]dexamethasone radioactivity from the nuclei of Fu5 and AH-130 cells preincubated with [3H]dexamethasone increased as the KCl concentration increased from 0 to 0.4 M, with no significant difference between the two cell lines. (3) The radioactivity was more sensitively released in Fu5 nuclei than in AH-130 nuclei upon treatment with DNAase I. The release of radioactivity was always larger than the release of DNA in both cell nuclei. In contrast to DNAase I, micrococcal nuclease treatment did not show any difference between the two cell lines in the release of radioactivity from nuclei, always showing a release of radioactivity equal to that of DNA.  相似文献   

10.
The binding of [3H]corticosterone and [3H]dexamethasone to soluble macromolecules in cytosol of the hippocampal region of the brain has been studied in adrenalectomized male rats. Unlabeled dexamethasone appears to be a less effective competitor than corticosterone in the binding of [3H]corticosterone, while both unlabeled steroids compete equally well for the binding or [3H]dexamethasone. Further investigation of macromolecular complexes with [3H]dexamethasone and [3H]corticosterone revealed that they differ from each other in their behavior during ammonium sulfate precipitation, BioRad A-5M gel permeation chromatography, DE-52 anion exchange chromatography and DNA-cellulose chromatography. (1) After exposure to a 33% ammonium sulfate solution relatively more [3H]dexamethasone complex than [3H]corticosterone complex is precipitated. (2) Treatment of the cytosol with 0.3 M KCl gives disaggregation of the supramolecular 3H-labeled corticoid complexes which are seen eluting with the void volume during gel permeation chromatography on Biorad A-5M at low ionic strength. In 0.3 M KCl, the [3H]dexamethasone complex has an elution volume somewhat smaller than that of bovine serum albumin, while the [3H]-corticosterone complex in 0.3 M KCl is too unstable to survive chromatography with A-5M. (3) Chromatography on DE-52 resolved the 3H-labeled corticoid complexes into three binding components. The complex with [3H]dexamethasone contains a higher percentage (85%) of a component less firmly attached (i.e. eluted by 0.15 M KCl) to the anion exchange resin than is observed for the complex with [3H]corticosterone (49%). (4) The complexes with 3H-labeled corticoids display an enhanced affinity for calf thymus DNA adsorbed to cellulose following "activation", warming to 25 degrees C for 15 min. Concurrently, a fraction of the [3H]dexamethasone complex becomes able to more firmly attach to the DE-52 anion exchange resin. These results with the binding of the cytosol hormone-receptor complexes to DNA-cellulose do not explain the marked in vivo preference of hippocampus for the cell nuclear uptake of [3H] corticosterone. However, the other differences in the properties of the complexes formed with the two labeled glucocorticoids support our previous inference that there may be more than one population of adrenal steroid "receptors" in brain tissue.  相似文献   

11.
Aliquots of rat liver cytosol glucocorticoid-receptor complexes (GRc) were transformed by an incubation with 8-10 mM ATP at 0 degrees C and were compared with those transformed by an exposure to 23 degrees C. The extent of receptor transformation was measured by chromatography of the samples over columns of DEAE-Sephacel. The ATP-transformed complexes, like those which were heat-transformed, exhibited lower affinity for the positively charged ion-exchange resin and were eluted with 0.12 M KCl (peak-I): the nontransformed complexes appeared to possess higher affinity and required 0.21 M KCl (peak II) for their elution. As expected, the receptor in the peak-I exhibited the DNA-cellulose binding capacity and sedimented as 4S in sucrose gradients. Peak II contained an 8-9S glucocorticoid receptor (GR) form that showed reduced affinity for DNA-cellulose. Presence of sodium tungstate (5 mM) prevented both heat and ATP transformation of the GRc resulting in the elution of the complexes in the region of nontransformed receptors. When parallel experiments were performed, binding of the cytosol GRc to rat liver nuclei or DNA-cellulose was seen to increase 10-15 fold upon transformation by heat or ATP: tungstate treatment blocked this process completely. The transformed and nontransformed GRc were also differentially fractionated by (NH4)2SO4: tungstate-treated (nontransformed) receptor required higher salt concentration and was precipitated at 55% saturation. In addition, the GRc could be extracted from DNA-cellulose by an incubation of the affinity resin with sodium tungstate resulting in approximately 500-fold purification of the receptor with a 30% yield. These studies show that the nontransformed, and the heat-, salt-, and ATP-transformed GRc from the rat liver cytosol can be separated chromatographically, and that the use of tungstate facilitates the resolution of these different receptor forms. In addition, extraction of the receptor from DNA-cellulose by tungstate provides another new and efficient method of partial receptor purification.  相似文献   

12.
We have studied the properties of the nuclear receptors for aldosterone in kidneys of chick embryo. Aliquots of 0.4 M KCl nuclear extracts were incubated with [3H]aldosterone with or without 1 microM RU28362, a potent glucocorticoid analog. Scatchard analyses of binding data revealed two classes of binding sites with Ka of 0.26 and 0.03 X 10(9) M-1 and Nmax of 330 fmol and 620 fmol/mg DNA respectively. In presence of RU28362, however, we observed only a single class of binding sites with a Ka of 1.02 X 10(8) M-1 and a Nmax of 90 fmol/mg DNA. Competition studies performed in presence of RU28362 showed that aldosterone was the more effective competitor followed by corticosterone, progesterone, deoxycorticosterone, dexamethasone, cortisol, triamcinolone acetonide and cortisone. The nuclear complexes had a sedimentation coefficient in the area of 8 S which changed to 4-5 S in the presence of 0.4 M KCl. This effect of KCl was prevented by the addition of 10 mM sodium molybdate. Always in the presence of the glucocorticoid analog, by DEAE-c chromatography we observed a major specific aldosterone-binding fraction which was eluted with 0.2 M KCl. This fraction sedimented at 8.4 S in the absence of sodium molybdate and KCl. In the absence of RU28362, DNA-c columns retained only a small portion of the nuclear complexes which were eluted with KCl. These complexes sedimented, on sucrose gradient, at 4.6 and 3.1 S, whereas those which did not bind to DNA-c had a sedimentation coefficient of 8 S. In the presence of RU28362, the majority of bound [3H]aldosterone remained in the column flow-through fraction; when this fraction was further analyzed on DEAE-c, complexes were eluted with 0.2 and 0.3 M KCl. These data indicate that nuclear receptors for aldosterone are present in small number in kidneys of chick embryo and that they are mostly in the 8 S form.  相似文献   

13.
J Kaplan 《Cell》1980,19(1):197-205
Rabbit alveolar macrophages internalize α-macroglobulin 125I-trypsin complexes subsequent to binding of complexes to high affinity surface receptors. Cells were capable of accumulating a 5–10 fold greater amount of αM · 125I-T at 37°C than at 0°C. At 0°C cell-bound αM · 125I-T was bound solely to surface receptors, whereas at 37°C the majority (85%) of cell-bound radioactivity was intracellular. The temperature-dependent accumulation of αM · 125I-T did not reflect a change in surface receptor number or ligand-receptor affinity. Rather, the greater rate of uptake reflected continued internalization of αM · 125I-T complexes. At 37°C cells took up 5–9 fmole αMT per μg cell protein per hr, whereas binding to surface receptors accounted for 0.5–0.7 fmole per μg cell protein. Once bound to surface receptors internalized αM · 125I-T was localized in lysosomes, where it was degraded at a rate of 35–45% per hr. Following binding of αM · T to receptors at 37°C, but not at 0°C, unoccupied receptors could be found on the cell surface. Using cycloheximide to probe receptor turnover, I calculated that receptors were replenished at a rate of 15% per hr. Cells incubated in the presence of cycloheximide exhibited unaltered ligand uptake and catabolism for hours. Thus the reappearance of receptor activity during ligand uptake was not primarily due to de novo receptor synthesis. The rate of ligand uptake was a function of the number of surface receptors. Measurement of αM125I-T binding to subcellular fractions did not reveal the presence of any intracellular reservoir of receptors. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that continued ligand uptake reflects receptor reutilization.  相似文献   

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

15.
The binding of the rat hepatic dioxin and glucocorticoid receptors to the polyanionic matrices heparin-Sepharose and DNA-cellulose in vitro and to cell nuclei in vivo was studied under various conditions. In a non-liganded and non-activated state both receptors eluted from heparin-Sepharose at a low ionic strength and were not retained on DNA-cellulose. Following ligandation and activation in vitro both receptors showed an increased affinity for heparin-Sepharose and were retained on DNA-cellulose. In analogy to these in vitro data, it was found that a high salt concentration (0.4 M KCl) was required to extract in vivo liganded dioxin receptor from purified nuclear preparations in contrast to that previously reported for non-liganded nuclear receptors. Limited proteolysis of both dioxin and glucocorticoid receptors resulted in molecular species of similar binding properties with regard to DNA-cellulose and heparin-Sepharose. We conclude that, in addition to the dioxin and glucocorticoid receptors showing considerable similarities in their physicochemical properties, they may also share a similar structural organization with regard to functional domains.  相似文献   

16.
Cytosol of human benign prostatic hypertrophy bound to R 1881 in a high affinity manner. Most of the protein which bound to R 1881 was recovered in the precipitate of a 0-30% saturation of ammonium sulfate, and was eluted in the void volume on a Sephadex G-200 column. The binding of cytosol to R 1881 was more inhibited by progestins than by dihydrotestosterone and estradiol-17 beta. The binder therefore seemed to be different from dihydrotestosterone-binding protein. The R 1881-binding component extracted from the nuclei by 0.4M KCl bound also to dihydrotestosterone in a high affinity manner. Cytosol prelabeled with R 1881 was bound to the nuclei in a nonsaturable process, and the extraction pattern of R 1881 by 0.4M KCl from the nuclei was almost identical to that in the case of dihydrotestosterone as the ligand. These results suggested that a part of the cytosolic protein which bound to R 1881 entered the nuclei where it bound to nuclear such components as dihydrotestosterone-binding protein.  相似文献   

17.
After 30 min of intraperitoneal injection of dexamethasone to adrenectomized rats about 15% of the label are incorporated into liver homogenate and only 1% of the cytosol-bound hormone is detected in the cell nuclei. The binding of the "in vitro" injected hormone by the nuclei does not obey the second-order reactions (the Scatchard plots). This is probably due to the existence of various ancillary mechanisms, which control the translocation of the hormone complex into cell nuclei at the level of cytoplasm and nuclear membranes. DNAase I, micrococcal nuclease and endogenous nucleolysis markedly increase the part of the nuclear hormone complex resistant to 0.4 M NaCl. In hepatocyte nuclei obtained by the collagenase method, the content of the 0.4 M NaCl-resistant receptor complex is also increased. The resistance of 0.4 M NaCl was also found in 80% of the glucocorticoid-insensitive nuclear complex from Zajdela ascite hepatoma cells. The changes in interaction of the hormone-receptor complex with nuclear acceptor sites eventually resulting in impaired sensitivity of host tissues to hormonal control can be due to the damage of chromatin structure induced by different influences and tumour growth.  相似文献   

18.
Conversion of the glucocorticoid receptor into a DNA-binding protein results in the generation of several distinct receptor subspecies (peaks A-E) which can be resolved by anion exchange chromatography. In vitro, the fraction of the receptor population (approx. 40%) which gains a capacity to bind DNA-cellulose is preferentially transformed into the peak A species by a process that was enhanced by the presence of KCl. At 0.4 M KCl, virtually all of the DNA-binding receptor was in the peak A form. Isolated nuclei also exhibit a receptor binding profile similar to that observed with DNA-cellulose.  相似文献   

19.
The interaction of dexamethasone with nuclei and chromatin was investigated following incubation of liver slices from fetal, immature (6-day-old) and adult rats with the labeled steroid at 37°. The number of specific binding sites for dexamethasone in purified liver nuclei increases with the age of the animal in a manner similar to that previously reported for the cytoplasmic receptor. The high affinity nuclear binding approaches saturation at 40 and 500 nM dexamethasone in fetal and adult liver, respectively. In comparison with dexamethasone, the relative efficiency of corticosterone to accumulate in the nucleus is 9 percent in fetal liver and only 1 percent in adult liver.Specifically bound dexamethasone in adult nuclei exists in at least three forms; a Tris-soluble, a KCl-soluble, and a residual (non-extractable with KC1 or DNase) form. Part of the Tris-soluble steroid is associated with macromolecules sedimenting at about 4 S both in the presence and absence of 0.4 M KCl. This form of the receptor was not detected in fetal liver nuclei. In liver chromatin, bound dexamethasone exists in a KCl-soluble and a residual form, the latter comprising the major fraction of steroid associated with chromatin from both fetal and adult tissue (60 and 75 percent, respectively). Treatment with Triton X-100 releases about 20 percent of the radioactivity in adult liver nuclei, but has no effect on fetal liver nuclei.In contrast with the above observations in the intact tissue, the major fraction of steroid bound to chromatin in cell-free systems is KCl- and DNase-soluble, only 30 percent remaining in the residual pellet.  相似文献   

20.
Choleragen, when bound to various cultured cells, resisted extraction by Triton X-100 under conditions which retained the cytoskeletal framework of the cells. This resistance (> 75% of the bound toxin) was observed in Friend erythroleukemic, mouse neuroblastoma N18 and NB41A and rat glioma C6 cells even though the different cells varied over 1000-fold in the number of toxin receptors. The extent of extraction did not depend on whether the cells were in monolayer culture or in suspension or whether choleragen was bound at 0 or 37°C. A similar resistance to extraction was also observed in membranes isolated from toxin-treated cells. Using more drastic conditions and other non-ionic detergents, 90% of the bound choleragen was solubilized from cells and membranes. When rat glioma C6 cells, which bind only small amounts of choleragen, were incubated with the ganglioside GM1, toxin binding was increased and the bound toxin was also resistant to extraction. When these cells were incubated with [3H]GM1, up to 70% of the cell-associated GM1 was extracted under the mild conditions. When the GM1-labeled cells were incubated with choleragen or its B (binding) component, there was a significant reduction in the solubilization of GM1. Similar results were obtained with isolated membranes. When choleragen-receptor complexes were isolated from N18 cells labeled with [3H]galactose by immunoadsorption, only labeled GM1 was specifically recovered. These results suggest that it is the choleragen-ganglioside complex that is resistant to detergent extraction.  相似文献   

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