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1.
The mouse immune interferon receptor gene is located on chromosome 10   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
When mouse L cells are incubated with 32P-labeled recombinant murine immune interferon ( [32P]Mu-IFN-gamma) and subsequently cross-linked with disuccinimidyl suberate, a major complex with an apparent molecular mass of 95,000-125,000 daltons can be visualized by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The complex was not formed when the binding was performed in the presence of excess unlabeled Mu-IFN-gamma or when Chinese hamster ovary cells were used. This complex therefore represents the Mu-IFN-gamma receptor (or its interferon-binding subunit). The chromosomal location of the Mu-IFN-gamma receptor (or the binding subunit of the receptor) gene, termed Ifgr, was identified by performing the binding and cross-linking reactions on a series of mouse-hamster somatic cell hybrids with different subsets of mouse chromosomes. The presence of mouse chromosome 10 was shown to be necessary and sufficient for the formation of the cross-linked complex. Thus, the gene coding for the binding subunit of the Mu-IFN-gamma receptor was localized to mouse chromosome 10. The presence of this chromosome in the hybrid cells was not sufficient, however, to confer antiviral resistance to the hybrids when they were treated with Mu-IFN-gamma and challenged with encephalomyocarditis virus.  相似文献   

2.
The non-ionic detergent n-octyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside was used to solubilize the VIP (vasoactive intestinal peptide) receptor from human colonic adenocarcinoma cell line HT29-D4. The binding of monoiodinated 125I-VIP to the solubilized receptor was specific, time-dependent, and reversible. Scatchard analysis of data obtained from competitive displacement of monoiodinated 125I-VIP by native VIP suggested the presence of two classes of VIP binding sites with Kd values of 0.32 and 46.7 nM. The binding capacities of these two classes were 1.7 x 10(10) and 30.2 x 10(10) sites/mg of proteins, respectively. The solubilized receptor retained the specificity of the human VIP receptor towards the peptides of the VIP/secretin/glucagon family. The order of potency in inhibiting monoiodinated 125I-VIP binding was VIP (IC50 = 1.0 x 10(-9) M) much greater than peptide histidine methionine amide (IC50 = 10(-7) M) greater than growth hormone-releasing factor (IC50 = 3 x 10(-7) M) greater than secretin (IC50 greater than 10(-6) M); glucagon had no effect on VIP binding. The reducing agent dithiothreitol inhibited in a dose-dependent manner the binding of 125I-VIP. Covalent cross-linking experiments between the solubilized receptor and 125I-VIP showed that after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography two major and one minor polypeptides of Mr 67,000, 72,000, and 83,000 were specifically labeled. When analyzed by gel filtration, the n-octyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside-solubilized 125I-VIP-receptor complex was resolved into two major peaks with molecular mass in the range of 60-70 and 270-300 kDa. Thus, the soluble form of the VIP receptor was probably a multimeric complex in which disulfide bonds may play an important role to hold the receptor in an active configuration.  相似文献   

3.
The human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) receptor (GM-R) is expressed on both hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic tissues. Although the receptor has been identified by cross-linking studies as an 84,000-dalton protein, very little is known about its biochemistry. In this report, we describe a soluble binding assay for the human GM-R which allowed us to characterize the receptor complex from various sources, including plasma membranes of placenta, neutrophils, and human myeloid leukemia cell lines. Preparation of membranes as well as solubilization by Triton X-100 and N-octylglucoside resulted in a 5-10-fold lower affinity of the receptor for GM-CSF. The Kd decreased from 20 to 80 pM in intact cells to 200-500 pM in both intact and solubilized membranes. Binding in solution was rapid, specific for GM-CSF, and best fit a "one-site" model with an approximate Kd of 500 pM. The dissociation rate constant for the soluble GM-R was very similar to that of intact cells (k2 = 0.013 min-1 versus 0.017 min-1, respectively). As expected, solubilized membranes obtained from those cells expressing the highest number of GM-R (neutrophils and dimethyl sulfoxide-induced HL-60 cells; approximately 500-800 sites/cell) possessed the highest concentration of soluble GM-R (approximately 2-3 x 10(8) GM-R/micrograms). Cross-linking of 125I-GM-CSF to soluble GM-R resulted in the appearance of two specifically labeled complexes. A major 110-kDa receptor-ligand complex is found when cross-linking is performed with intact cells; both 110- and 200-kDa species are seen when cross-linking is performed with either intact membranes or soluble GM-R. These studies define methods by which intact GM-R can be solubilized and measured in solution, permitting a more complete biochemical characterization of the intact GM-R complex.  相似文献   

4.
Isolation of the hemopexin receptor from human placenta   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A hemopexin receptor detected in detergent-solubilized placental membranes was purified from the human placenta, using hemopexin-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The solubilized membranes exhibited binding sites of 2.77 pmol of hemopexin/mg of protein with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 6.6 X 10(-8) M. The purified receptor has a molecular weight of 80,000, determined on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. Immunoinhibition experiments using the antibody against the placental receptor revealed inhibition of binding of 125I-hemopexin to human leukemia K562 and HL 60 cells, thereby strongly supporting that the polypeptide isolated from the human placenta was the hemopexin receptor.  相似文献   

5.
Murine immune interferon (Mu-IFN-gamma) can be radiolabeled with [gamma-32P]ATP by the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The resulting 32P-labeled Mu-IFN-gamma (32P-Mu-IFN-gamma) with high radiological specific activity (60-260 muCi/micrograms) retains biological activity. Acid hydrolysis of 32P-Mu-IFN-gamma or 32P-labeled human IFN-gamma leads to the release of [32P]phosphoserine but not phosphothreonine or phosphotyrosine. With 32P-Mu-IFN-gamma, we have demonstrated that there are 5 X 10(3) to 1.5 X 10(4) receptors per-cell on several murine cell lines of diverse origin and that the Kd at 24 degrees C for these cells is in the range of 1 X 10(-10) to 1 X 10(-9) M. Covalent binding of 32P-Mu-IFN-gamma to its receptor results in the formation of several specific high-molecular weight products, the major one of which has an apparent molecular weight of 90,000-100,000. If this represents a 1:1 complex of Mu-IFN-gamma and its receptor (or its binding subunit), the murine interferon gamma receptor has a molecular weight of 75,000-85,000.  相似文献   

6.
The colony-stimulating factor, CSF-1, selectively stimulates the survival, proliferation, and differentiation of mononuclear phagocytes. The solubilization, assay, and characteristics of the CSF-1 receptor from the J774.2 murine macrophage cell line are described. The recovery of cell-surface receptor in the postnuclear supernatant membrane fraction of hypotonically disrupted cells was 76%. Recovery of the ligand binding activity of the receptor after solubilization of this fraction with 1% Triton X-100 was approximately 150%. The binding of 125I-CSF-1 to intact cells and membrane preparations was consistent with the existence of a single class of high-affinity receptor sites. In contrast, the equilibrium binding of 125I-CSF-1 to the solubilized postnuclear fraction indicated the existence of two distinct classes of binding site (apparent Kds 0.15 nM and 10 nM). A rapid assay was developed for the high-affinity sites, which were shown to be associated with the CSF-1 receptor. The function of the low-affinity sites, which have not been demonstrated on intact cells or cell membranes and which are 13 times more abundant than the high-affinity sites, is unknown. The solubilized high-affinity receptor-CSF-1 complex was stable on storage at 0 degrees C and -70 degrees C but dissociated at 37 degrees C. Dissociation also occurred at 0 degrees C in buffers of low pH (4.0) or high ionic strength (0.7 M NaCl).  相似文献   

7.
The neuropeptide substance P (SP) stimulates human T-lymphocyte function in vitro. Human blood T-lymphocytes and cultured human IM-9 B-lymphoblasts express 7,000-10,000 and 25,000-30,000 substance P receptors per cell, respectively. The specific binding of 125I-SP is retained in IM-9 lymphoblast membranes solubilized in 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonic acid (CHAPS) at a detergent-to-protein ratio of 1.0. In addition, specific and reversible SP binding to soluble IM-9 cell membrane proteins is demonstrated by gel filtration. The saturation of binding of 125I-SP to both intact and solubilized IM-9 cell membranes attained a steady state after 40-50 min at 4 degrees C. Scatchard analysis of the concentration dependence of 125I-SP binding to IM-9 cell membranes revealed a KD of 0.87 +/- 0.8 nM (mean +/- S.D., n = 4), which is similar to that observed in intact cells, and a density of receptors of 21 +/- 3 fmol/mg of membrane protein (mean +/- S.D.). Binding of 125I-SP to solubilized membranes demonstrated a KD of 0.75 +/- 0.33 nM (mean +/- S.D., n = 3) and a density of receptors of 3.7 +/- 1.5 fmol/mg of membrane protein (mean +/- S.D., n = 3). Affinity cross-linking of 125I-SP by disuccinimidyl suberate to intact IM-9 cells and membranes revealed specifically labeled proteins of Mr 58,000 and 33,000 in cells, and 58,000, 33,000, and 16,000 in membranes by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under both reducing and nonreducing conditions. Competitive effects of substituent peptides of SP on cross-linking and 125I-SP binding to membranes demonstrated that the SP receptor recognized the carboxyl-terminal domain of the peptide. Membranes from cells preincubated in vitro for 12 h at 37 degrees C with 10(-8) M SP demonstrated a decrease in SP receptor density to 13 +/- 2 fmol/mg (mean +/- S.D., n = 2), and a parallel diminution in the specific labeling of membrane proteins of Mr 58,000 and 33,000. These observations suggest that solubilization in CHAPS preserves the binding characteristics of the IM-9 lymphoblast receptor for SP, and that affinity cross-linking techniques identify by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis membrane proteins that are specifically labeled by SP.  相似文献   

8.
Purification of the gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) or bombesin receptor has proved elusive in part due to technical difficulties. In the present studies, the problem of oxidized radioligand was avoided by the use of 125I-GRP, which was verified to be not oxidized by high performance liquid chromatography. Specific 125I-GRP binding (at 0 degrees C) to intact human small cell lung carcinoma NCI-H345 cells which had been subjected to a dilute acid wash was 6 fmol/10(6) cells. Inhibition of GRP degradation by human H345 cell membranes through the use of phenanthroline or phosphoramidon permitted the development of binding assays for the GRP receptor in detergent-solubilized crude membrane preparations. The solubilized GRP receptor exhibited saturable, high affinity (KD = 1.3 nM), temperature-dependent specific binding averaging 402 +/- 65 fmol/mg protein (mean +/- S.E. for eight separate membrane preparations with 125I-GRP concentration = 3 nM), with a Bmax = 434 fmol/mg protein using a gel filtration binding assay. That the GRP receptor had been solubilized was demonstrated by its failure to pellet when centrifuged at 100,000 x g for 60 min, its passage through a 0.22-micron filter without loss of binding activity, and its elution in the void volume of a Sephadex G-50 gel filtration column, but within the inclusion volume of a Sephacryl S-200 column (Ve/V0 = 1.1). Isolation of the GRP receptor from human H345 cell-solubilized membranes was achieved by ligand affinity chromatography. A unique 70-kDa band on silver-stained reduced sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was reproducibly eluted from GRP14-27 affinity columns by an acidic high salt buffer, but binding activity was denatured by these conditions. The protein nature of the GRP receptor was demonstrated by its sensitivity to proteases after isolation. In addition, two unique bands of 65 and 70 kDa were eluted from the GRP14-27 affinity column with GRP14-27 in neutral buffer, and this eluate possessed specific 125I-GRP binding with a stoichiometry of approximately 1:1. Thus, reported here is the isolation of a functional membrane-associated, saturable, high affinity GRP receptor with temperature-dependent binding from the solubilized membranes of human H345 cells.  相似文献   

9.
Rat brain angiotensin II (Ang II) receptors were solubilized with a yield of 30-40% using the synthetic detergent 3[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio)]-1-propanesulfonate. Kinetic analysis employing the high-affinity antagonist 125I-Sar1,Ile8-Ang II indicated that the solubilized receptors exhibited the same properties as receptors present within intact brain membranes. Furthermore, there was a positive correlation (r = 0.99) between the respective pIC50 values of a series of agonist and antagonists competing for 125I-Sar1,Ile8-Ang II labeled binding sites in either solubilized or intact membranes. Moreover, covalent labeling of 125I-Ang II to solubilized receptors with the homo-bifunctional cross-linker disuccinimidyl suberate, followed by gel filtration, revealed one major and one minor binding peak with apparent molecular weights of 64,000 and 115,000, respectively. Two binding proteins of comparable molecular weights (i.e., 112,000 and 60,000) were also identified by covalent cross-linking of 125I-Ang II to solubilized brain membranes followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. In contrast, only the smaller molecular mass binding protein was observed when solubilized membranes were labeled with the antagonist 125I-Sar1,Ile8-Ang II prior to gel filtration, and chromatofocusing of antagonist labeled sites revealed only one peak with an isoelectric point of 6.2. The successful solubilization of these binding sites should facilitate continued investigation of Ang II receptors in the brain.  相似文献   

10.
To evaluate the relation between the pancreatic cholecystokinin (CCK) receptor and guanine nucleotide-binding protein(s) we studied the effects of nucleotides on 125I-CCK binding to pancreatic acinar plasma membranes, 125I-CCK binding to solubilized 125I-CCK receptors, and the stability of the solubilized 125I-CCK-receptor complex. In plasma membranes, guanine nucleotides both inhibited CCK binding and increased the dissociation of CCK from its receptor. The potency of the nucleotides studied was GTP gamma S = GMP-PNP greater than GTP much greater than ATP. When membranes were solubilized with digitonin, subsequent binding of CCK was insensitive to guanine nucleotides including GTP, GMP-PNP and GTP gamma S. However, if CCK binding occurred before solubilization of the membranes, guanine nucleotides increased dissociation at concentrations and with a specificity similar to that observed for effects on intact pancreatic membranes. It is concluded that guanine nucleotides act via a protein which is separable from the receptor to induce dissociation of bound CCK. Moreover, CCK binding induces an association in the plasma membrane of the CCK receptor with this guanine nucleotide binding protein.  相似文献   

11.
Detergent solubilization of the interleukin 1 receptor   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Interleukin 1 (IL 1) receptors were solubilized from membranes prepared from murine EL-4 thymoma cells with the zwitterionic detergent 3[(3-cholamidopropyl) dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS). Binding of IL 1 to the solubilized receptor was detected by a polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation procedure. Concentrations of CHAPS from 4 to 8 mM were effective in solubilizing the IL 1 receptor. At 10 mM CHAPS, there was some loss in binding activity, whereas 2 mM CHAPS was completely ineffective in solubilizing the receptor. Detergent concentrations of 4 mM were routinely used. The solubilized receptor retains the ability to bind 125I-IL 1 in a specific and saturable manner. Scatchard analysis reveals a single type of high affinity binding site having an apparent dissociation constant (KD) of approximately 1.2 X 10(-10) M. Nearly identical KD values are observed for membrane fractions. There are approximately 400 to 500 fmol receptor/mg protein in the detergent extract, corresponding to a two- to threefold enrichment in the Bmax observed for membranes. There is no loss in receptor activity as determined by complete recovery of the total number of binding sites from membranes after solubilization. Binding kinetics show that apparent steady state for the solubilized receptor is reached after 60 min at 37 degrees C. The binding of 125I-IL 1 is essentially irreversible because relatively little bound ligand can be dissociated from the receptor on the addition of excess unlabeled IL 1 at 37 degrees C. Both human IL 1 alpha and IL 1 beta compete for binding of 125I-IL 1 to the soluble receptor, confirming that IL 1 alpha and IL 1 beta bind to the same receptor. Other recombinant proteins, including interferon-alpha A, interferon-gamma, and interleukin 2 have no inhibitory effect.  相似文献   

12.
Specific binding of a fully biologically active 125I-gonadotrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) to isolated anterior pituitary cells is time dependent, saturable and the concentration dependent binding curves exhibit positive cooperativity. Binding to intact or solubilized plasma membranes and an affinity purified GnRH receptor protein reveals in all instances multiple high affinity binding sites. Thus, GnRH receptor protein appears to be an intrinsic constituent of the cell membrane, and perhaps, other membranous organelles. To investigate the latter, the binding of 125I-GnRH to various subcellular fractions was studied and its affinity and time requirements determined. GnRH binding to plasma membranes and secretory granules was to multiple high affinity sites, while that to nuclei and microsomes was to a single high affinity site. Binding was 1.83 +/- 0.07, 0.78 +/- 0.04, 0.31 +/- 0.03 and 0.27 +/- 0.03 fmol micrograms-1 protein for isolated plasma membranes, secretory granules, microsomes and nuclei, respectively, after 30 min incubation with 10(-9) M GnRH. The magnitude of binding to microsomes did not change during the incubation period. It did not show any decrease (p greater than 0.05) in isolated nuclei and plasma membranes, except for the 24 h time period, when a significant drop (p less than 0.001) was seen. Binding to the secretory granule fraction culminated at 15 min and then decreased (p less than 0.001) steadily to a non-detectable level at 24 h. Thus GnRH receptor protein or its portion may be an integral part of some membranous particles in the anterior pituitary cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The presence of a putative GRP receptor on rat pancreatic particulate membranes was demonstrated by covalent cross-linking to 125I-gastrin releasing peptide (GRP), which revealed a radioactive band with Mr = 80-90 kDa on reduced SDS-PAGE. Fresh rat pancreatic membranes contained a GRP receptor which was solubilized with Triton X-100 as assessed by its failure to sediment at 100,000 x g for one hour and its ability to pass through a 0.22 mu filter. When 125I-GRP binding was studied using Sephadex G50 gel filtration chromatography to separate bound from unbound ligand, substantial amounts of 125I-GRP binding were observed in rat crude solubilized pancreatic membranes, but essentially no specific binding was observed until the crude solubilized membranes were fractionated by ammonium sulfate precipitation. Specific 125I-GRP binding was 500, 700 and 1400 fmol/mg protein, respectively, in the 0-25%, 25-50% and 50-80% saturated ammonium sulfate fractions (125I-GRP concentration = 1 nM). Specific binding was temperature dependent, saturable and of high affinity, (KD = 2.3 nM). A unique 70 kDa band was visualized by silver staining of the SDS-PAGE of eluates of GRP(14-27) affinity gel compared with eluates of control affinity gels incubated with the 25-50% (NH4)2SO4 fraction. The lower Mr than that observed with covalent cross-linking may represent the binding subunit of a larger receptor protein. This ligand-affinity isolated protein is thus a good candidate for the GRP receptor, or the binding subunit of it, from normal rat pancreas.  相似文献   

14.
Using 125I-interleukin-1 beta (125I-IL-1 beta) as a ligand, a specific receptor of high affinity dissociation constant (1.1 +/- 0.2 x 10(-10) M) with binding sites (350 +/- 40/cell) for interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) has been demonstrated on cultured porcine thyroid cells. IL-1 alpha almost equally cross-reacted with the receptor (Kd = 1.2 +/- 0.3 x 10(-10) M and 350 +/- 50 binding sites/cell). TSH, IL-2 and other peptide hormones did not inhibit the binding of 125I-IL-1 beta to thyroid cells. Crosslinking study revealed a major band (approximately 95 kD) with a corrected molecular mass of approximately 78 kD. Moreover, both IL-1 beta and IL-1 alpha stimulated prostaglandin E2 production of cultured porcine thyroid cells, although the potency of IL-1 alpha was slightly greater than that of IL-1 beta. These results suggest that IL-1 may be involved in the regulation of thyroid cell function.  相似文献   

15.
Chick cardiac membranes were affinity labelled by cross-linking to membrane-bound 125I-endothelin-1 with disuccinimidyl tartarate. SDS/PAGE and autoradiographic analysis of the 125I-endothelin-1-labelled material in the presence or absence of 2-mercaptoethanol revealed one major labelled band, corresponding to a molecular mass of 53 kDa, whose appearance was dose-dependently inhibited by the addition of unlabelled endothelin-1 (1-100 nM). Subtracting the molecular mass of 125I-endothelin-1 and disuccinimidyl tartarate, the binding protein appeared to have a molecular mass of 50 kDa. To investigate further the molecular properties of endothelin receptor, the 125I-endothelin-1-endothelin-receptor complex was solubilized from chick cardiac membranes using the detergent digitonin. Sucrose gradient sedimentation of the solubilized complex indicated a sedimentation coefficient of 13 S, whereas the complex of (+)-[3H]PN200-110, a dihydropyridine derivative, and dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ channels sedimented at 22 S. A monoclonal antibody raised against dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ channels from the chick brain did not immunoprecipitate the 125I-endothelin-1-endothelin-receptor complex. These data suggest that endothelin receptor is clearly distinct from dihydropyridine-sensitive Ca2+ channels and endothelin has its own specific 50-kDa receptor.  相似文献   

16.
Iodine-125 labelled alpha-latrotoxin from the venom of Central Asia black widow spider Latrodectus mactans tredecimguttatus binds specifically to the bovine brain membrane receptor producing a stable slowly dissociating complex with Kd = 1.6 x 10(-10) M and Bmax = 0.5 pmol/mg protein. Treatment of the complex with alkaline high-salt buffer induces reversible dissociation of the bound toxin. The antitoxin polyclonal antibody does not increase the dissociation rate of the bound toxin. Wheat germ lectin as well as concanavalin A inhibit the toxin binding to the membrane receptor. The receptor is solubilized with ionic and non-ionic detergents, and methods of latrotoxin binding assay are developed. The solubilized receptor is shown to retain high affinity to toxin, its binding activity being stable but critically dependent on the presence of calcium ions. Chromatographic properties of the receptor suggest its glycoprotein nature.  相似文献   

17.
Characterization of a receptor for C5a anaphylatoxin on human eosinophils   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
The complement anaphylatoxin peptide C5a is well known to activate human polymorphonuclear leukocytes through receptor-mediated processes. C5a has also been reported to activate eosinophils for both chemotaxis and hexose uptake. We characterized the receptor molecule for human C5a on human eosinophils and compared it with the receptor on human neutrophils. At 4 degrees C, uptake of 1 nM 125I-C5a reaches equilibrium within 10 min on both cell types. Binding of 125I-C5a occurs over a concentration range comparable to that which stimulates lysosomal enzyme release and hexose uptake in both cell types. Scatchard analyses of the data indicate the presence of two receptor populations on eosinophils; a high affinity receptor with 15,000-20,000 sites/cell and a Kd of 3.1 +/- 0.6 x 10(-11) M, and a low affinity receptor with approximately 375,000 sites/cell and a Kd of 1 x 10(-7) M. Parallel experiments with neutrophils indicate the presence of a single receptor population with approximately 90,000 sites/cell and a Kd of 4.8 +/- 0.1 x 10(-10)M. The eosinophil receptor molecule was further characterized by covalently cross-linking 125I-C5a to cells followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the solubilized material. Autoradiography indicates the presence of a dominant C5a-eosinophil receptor complex with an apparent mass of 60-65 kDa. The corresponding neutrophil-C5a receptor complex has an apparent mass of 50-52 kDa as observed by others. When the cross-linked 125I-C5a-receptor complex was treated with cyanogen bromide, different patterns were observed on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis for neutrophils and eosinophils. Thus, human eosinophils have a receptor for C5a anaphylatoxin which appears to be distinct from the C5a receptor present on human neutrophils.  相似文献   

18.
The hepatic receptor for VIP was solubilized from rat liver plasma membranes with 1.4% digitonin and shown to conserve its ability to bind to the ligand. This solubilized receptor demonstrated the high affinity and specificity for VIP (KD1 nM, binding preference: VIP > PHI > secretin > thymosin 1) which were observed with the nonsolubilized VIP receptor on intact liver plasma membranes. 125I-VIP was next cross-linked to either the solubilized or nonsolubilized receptor using disuccinimido suberate or disuccinimido dithiobis(propionate), and the resulting complexes analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by autoradiography. A broad autoradiographic band which demonstrated a high affinity for VIP was identified at Mr 56,000 (53,000 in the absence of the reducing agent dithiothreitol) for both the solubilized and nonsolubilized receptors. We have thus been able to solubilize from rat liver plasma membranes a receptor with high affinity and specificity for VIP, and confirmed its structural similarity with the native VIP receptor in nonsolubilized membranes using cross-linking techniques.  相似文献   

19.
A gastrin binding protein (GBP) has been identified in detergent extracts of porcine gastric mucosal membranes by covalent cross-linking to 125I-[Nle15]gastrin with disuccinimidyl suberate. The apparent molecular weight of the cross-linked complex (80,000) is uneffected by reduction suggesting that the GBP is not composed of disulfide-bonded subunits. Subtraction of the molecular weight of 125I-gastrin indicates that the molecular weight of the GBP is 78,000. A similar molecular weight has been observed previously for the gastrin receptor (74,000) on intact canine parietal cells and plasma membranes therefrom, and for the receptor for the related hormone cholecystokinin (76,000-85,000) on pancreatic acinar membranes under reducing conditions. The similarity in molecular weight between the gastrin receptor and the solubilized GBP suggests that the latter protein is probably the gastrin receptor. However, the concentration (2 microM) of [Nle15]gastrin required for 50% inhibition of cross-linking of gastrin to the GBP solubilized in 0.1% Triton X-100 is 200-fold greater than the value (10 nM) observed for the gastrin receptor on isolated canine gastric parietal cells. A lower concentration (0.3 microM) of [Nle15]gastrin was required to inhibit cross-linking in a milder detergent (0.4% digitonin, 0.08% cholate). Thus, the reduced affinity for gastrin of the putative solubilized form of the gastrin receptor appears to be a result of detergent extraction.  相似文献   

20.
Binding sites having the characteristics of receptors for "activated" alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) have been solubilized with octyl-beta-D-glucoside from fibroblast membranes. When the detergent was removed by dialysis, the resulting insoluble extract was shown to bind 125I-alpha 2M specifically. Analysis of the binding data using a nonlinear curve-fitting program suggests that the solubilized preparation contains two classes of binding sites (KD = 0.34 nM and KD = 104 nM). Membranes or solubilized extracts from KB cells which lack alpha 2M binding sites did not specifically bind 125I-alpha 2M. The solubilized binding sites from fibroblasts were inactivated by boiling and trypsin treatment, and required Ca+2 for maximal binding. In addition, the high affinity binding of 125I-alpha 2M to the solubilized receptor was inhibited by bacitracin and by alpha-bromo-5-iodo-4-hydroxy-3-nitroacetophenone, two agents which interfere with the uptake of alpha 2M in cultured fibroblasts. Using a combination of ion exchange and gel permeation chromatography, we have purified the high affinity alpha 2M binding site approximately 100-fold from membrane derived from NIH-3T3 (spontaneously transformed) fibroblasts grown as tumors in mice. The receptor is apparently an acidic protein and the receptor octyl-beta-D-glucoside complex has a Stokes radius of 45-50 A as measured by gel filtration.  相似文献   

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