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1.
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   

2.
Both the nonactivated and activated forms of the chick oviduct cytosol progesterone receptor-hormone complexes displayed first-order dissociation kinetics at temperatures between 0 and 25 degrees C. The rate constant was always 2-3-times greater for the nonactivated than for the activated complex. The thermodynamic parameters calculated from the Eyring plot for the nonactivated and activated forms, respectively, were: delta H+ = 28.6 +/- 0.2 and 29.9 +/- 1.5 kcal/mol; -T delta S+ = 7.4 +/- 0.6 and 7.7 +/- 1.6 kcal/mol; and delta G+ = 21.3 +/- 0.5 and 22.1 +/- 0.1 kcal/mol. These values suggest that activation results in an increase in enthalpy of the ligand-receptor interaction, thus stabilizing the complex. The dissociation rate constants for the native complex obtained by two different experimental approaches, namely, isotope dilution ('chase') and dissociation against charcoal, indicated the absence of cooperativity in the receptor-ligand binding.  相似文献   

3.
In cells exposed to glucocorticoids at 37 degrees C activated glucocorticoid-receptor complexes (complexes with affinity for nuclei and DNA) are formed after nonactivated complexes. Activation thus appears to be an obligatory physiological process. To investigate this process we have characterized cytoplasmic complexes formed in rat thymocytes at 0 and 37 degrees C. Complexes in cytosols stabilized with molybdate were analyzed by sucrose gradient centrifugation and by chromatography on DNA-cellulose, DEAE-cellulose, and agarose gels. Two major complexes were observed: the nonactivated complex, eluted from DEAE at approximately 200 mM KCl, was formed at 0 and 37 degrees C, gave S20,w = 9.2 S, Stokes radius = 8.3 nm, and calculated Mr = 330,000; the activated complex, eluted from DEAE at approximately 50 mM KCl, appeared only at 37 degrees C, gave S20,w = 4.8 S, Stokes radius = 5.0 nm, and Mr = 100,000. A third, minor complex, probably mero-receptor, which appeared mainly at 37 degrees C, bound to neither DNA nor DEAE, and gave S20,w = 2.9 S, Stokes radius = 2.3 nm, and Mr = 27,000. With three small columns in series (DNA-cellulose, DEAE-cellulose and hydroxylapatite), the three complexes can be separated in 5-10 min. By this method we have examined the stability of complexes under our conditions. We conclude that in intact thymus cells glucocorticoid-receptor complexes occur principally in two forms, nonactivated and activated, and that activation is accompanied by a large reduction in size. The origin of the mero-receptor complex remains uncertain.  相似文献   

4.
Cytosols from rat thymus cells incubated with glucocorticoid contain nonactivated and activated receptors and mero-receptor complexes, in relative amounts that depend on the incubation conditions. These forms can be separated by a rapid minicolumn chromatographic technique based on their differential affinities for DNA, DEAE, and hydroxylapatite. We have used this method to examine the effects of ATP, pyrophosphate (PPi), and related compounds on cytosolic complexes. In addition to ATP, already known to promote activation at 0 degrees C, PPi, ADP, and other triphosphates at millimolar concentrations promoted activation of nonactivated complexes. AMP and Pi had little effect. ATP and PPi at millimolar concentrations also reduced binding of activated complexes to DNA. Characterization of the ATP- and PPi-activated complexes by gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography revealed two DNA-binding forms. One was essentially identical (Stokes radius of approximately 5.4 nm, elution from DEAE at approximately 50 mM KCl) to the normal activated complex obtained directly from cells incubated at 37 degrees C. The other had a Stokes radius of approximately 3.1 nm and had no affinity for DEAE. Analysis by minicolumns and gel filtration showed that ATP and PPi prevented formation of mero-receptor complexes, a process which occurs relatively rapidly in untreated thymus cytosols. These compounds did not alter properties of preformed mero-receptor. The accumulation of 3.1-nm complexes in thymus cytosols in which formation of mero-receptor is prevented suggests that this form is an intermediate, normally short-lived, in the conversion of 5.4 nm complexes to mero-receptor.  相似文献   

5.
We have examined the rate of dissociation of internalized 125I-asialo-orosomucoid-receptor complexes in freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. Cell suspensions were washed with ethylene glycol bis (beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid at 0 degrees C to remove surface-bound ligand and then assessed for the retention of radioactive glycoprotein in the presence of digitonin, which permeabilized the cells and released the internal soluble contents. In cells which initially contained only surface-bound ligand, about 50% of the internalized ligand dissociated from receptor very rapidly (t1/2 less than or equal to 2.5 min, k greater than or equal to 0.28 min-1), at 37 degrees C, whereas the other 50% dissociated more slowly with apparent first order kinetics (t1/2 = 50 min, k = 0.014 min-1). This equal distribution of internalized ligand into two compartments, from which dissociation occurred with very different kinetics, did not depend on the extent of surface receptor occupancy and also occurred under non-steady state conditions of continuous exposure to ligand. Ligand entering both the rapid and slow dissociation compartments was eventually degraded with apparent first order kinetics (k = 0.0047 min-1), suggesting that the intracellular routing of ligand to lysosomes after dissociation from either compartment was via the same pathway. The fast and slow dissociation of receptor-ligand complexes were also distinguished by different temperature sensitivities; the slow dissociation process ceased below 18 degrees C, whereas the fast dissociation process still proceeded. The equal partition of internalized complexes into the two kinetic compartments did not change as a function of temperature but did change as cells continued to endocytose asialo-orosomucoid at 37 degrees C. As the internal receptor pool approached a steady state level of occupancy, there was an increase in the average time for receptor recycling and an increase in the fraction of incoming receptor-ligand complexes which dissociated rapidly (approximately 75%). In addition, under steady state conditions, the rate of the slow dissociation process increased (k = 0.026 min-1, t1/2 = 27 min).  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the rate and character with which testosterone (T) and 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) dissociate from the androgen receptor both within intact cultured genital skin fibroblasts of a subject with 5 alpha-reductase deficiency and after the androgen-receptor complexes have been extracted from the cells. Within the cells, the kinetics of the dissociative process for each hormone was first-order, but T dissociated four times faster than DHT. An Arrhenius plot of the variation of the dissociation rate constants with temperature for T was linear and yielded an activation energy of 28 kcal/mol. This value is identical with the one previously determined for activated DHT-receptor complexes. T-receptor complexes extracted from the cells dissociated with complex kinetics: at 37 degrees C the rate constants of the "fast" and "slow" components were 40 and 14 X 10(-3) min-1, respectively. In contrast, DHT-receptor complexes extracted from the cells dissociated with first-order kinetics and at a rate identical to that observed within cells, except after exposure to pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (5 mM) or concentration by Amicon (B-15) filtration, when their dissociation kinetics became complex. We interpret these data to mean that, within the cells, both T- and DHT-receptor complexes exist predominantly in the activated state whereas, when extracted from the cells, DHT-receptor complexes remain activated, unless perturbed, while T-receptor complexes become unstable spontaneously, probably by reverting to a preactivated state.  相似文献   

7.
A M Traish  D F Williams  H H Wotiz 《Steroids》1989,53(1-2):169-193
The effects of sucrose on androgen binding to its receptor were investigated. Sucrose decreased the rate of thermal inactivation of unoccupied and occupied androgen receptor (AR) and the rates of [3H]5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone [( 3H]DHT) dissociation from both activated and nonactivated AR complexes. Binding of [3H]DHT to AR in vivo, or in intact cells at 37 degrees C, caused reduction of [3H]DHT dissociation from cytosolic and nuclear complexes, as compared to in vitro labeled receptor complexes. Further, exposure of these complexes to sucrose at 0 degrees C caused an additional reduction of dissociation rates. Thus, the decrease of [3H]DHT dissociation induced by sucrose is independent of the reaction that reduces DHT dissociation from activated and transformed AR. Sucrose also reduced the ability of mersalyl acid to inactivate AR complexes. This effect of sucrose was markedly diminished in the presence of 2M urea. Sucrose did not significantly affect the association rate, sedimentation properties, or nuclear binding ability of AR complexes, but it did decrease the equilibrium dissociation constant. Other monosaccharides and disaccharides also stabilized AR. These data suggest that sucrose induces conformational changes in the steroid binding domain of androgen receptor, thereby reducing the rates of inactivation, steroid dissociation, and the accessibility of sulfhydryl groups to mersalyl.  相似文献   

8.
Receptor-estradiol complexes (RE2) formed at 0 degree C in hypotonic buffers bind poorly to nuclei (nonactivated state); their sedimentation coefficient in low or high salt sucrose density gradients (SDG) is 8 S or 4 S, respectively (untransformed state); estradiol dissociates from untransformed RE2 at a high rate (k-1 = 0.44 min-1). Brief heating (28 degrees C, 30 min) induces activation (increased binding of RE2 to nuclei and polyanions), transformation (formation of receptor dimers which sediment at 6 S in 0.4 M KCl/borate SDG) and RE2 transition into a state from which E2 dissociates at a lower rate (k-2 = 8 X 10(-3) min-1). We have examined the role of arginyl residues in the above changes in receptor properties. It is well established (Patthy, L., and Smith, E. L. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 557-564; 565-569) that 1,2-cyclohexanedione (1,2-CHD) is a highly specific arginine-modifying agent; in borate buffer at 28 degrees C, but not at 0 degrees C, peptide arginyls are covalently modified. RE2 complexes heated in the presence of 1,2-CHD (50 mM) bind poorly to nuclei; 1,4-cyclohexamedione and 1,2-cyclohexanediol had no effect. This reagent also prevents the temperature-induced transition of RE2 into a state with slow E2 dissociation rates although it does not interfere with heat transformation (formation of 6 S dimer). Modification of heat-activated and transformed RE2 by 1,2-CHD causes a loss in receptor binding to nuclei and alters RE2 from a state with slow into a state with fast E2 dissociation rates, although the receptor remains unaltered in the transformed 6 S state. At 0 degree C, i.e. in the absence of covalent arginyl modification, 1,2-CHD promotes dissociation of the 8 S aggregate into 4.6 S subunits which bind to nuclei to the same extent as heat-transformed control RE2. Heating of the molybdate-stabilized 8 S receptor in the presence of 1,2-CHD yields a nonactivated 8 S receptor (4.6 S on high salt SDG); removal of molybdate and unreacted 1,2-CHD by gel filtration at 0 degree C followed by exposure to high ionic strength causes 8 S to 4 S dissociation; these 4 S subunits, however, do not bind to nuclei, suggesting that their nucleotropic domain was accessible to 1,2-CHD modification while the receptor was in the aggregated 8 S state. It is proposed that the nuclear binding site of the estrogen receptor contains arginyl residues. Furthermore, a distinct set of arginyl residues appears to be related to the estrogen-binding domain; its integrity is required for the heat-induced formation and maintenance of the RE2 state with slow E2 dissociation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
For biochemical characterization, the first component of human complement (C1) was reconstituted from physiologic concentrations of purified C1q, 125I C1r, and 131I C1s. Upon incubation at 37 degrees C, C1 spontaneously activated, as evidenced by the characteristic proteolysis of the C1r and C1s polypeptide chains as detected by SDS-PAGE analysis. This spontaneous C1 activation followed first-order kinetics (t 1/2 = 4 min and k = 0.173 min-1) with an activation energy of 19.1 kcal/mol. Spontaneous C1 activation was unaffected by the general protease inhibitor phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride (PMSF) but reversibly blocked by a known inhibitor of C1 activation, nitrophenylguanidinobenzoate (NPGB). Spontaneous C1 activation was measured at C1 concentrations ranging from 9 to 160 nM (i.e., 0.05 to 1.0 times physiologic concentrations). The data indicate that C1 spontaneously activates by an intramolecular autocatalytic mechanism, for first-order kinetics were observed over the entire concentration range with t 1/2 = 4 min at each concentration. However, the percentage of activable C1 decreased with dilution due to C1 dissociation (i.e., C1qr2s2 leads to C1q + C1r2s2). The observed concentration of C1 that spontaneously activated at each dilution equalled the concentration of C1 present as macromolecular C1. When reconstituted C1 was mixed with normal human serum (NHS) and then incubated at 37 degrees C, spontaneous C1 activation was completely inhibited. Pretreating NHS at 56 degrees C for 30 min destroyed its inhibitory activity. In conclusion, C1 spontaneously autoactivates at 37 degrees C by an intramolecular mechanism. This activation is suppressed in NHS.  相似文献   

10.
Adrenal cytochrome P450 C21 in a membrane-reconstituted system catalyzed 21-hydroxylation of 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone at a rate higher than that for progesterone in the steady state at 37 degrees C. The rate of product formation in the steady state increased with the concentration of the complex between P450 C21 and the reductase in the membranes. The complex formation was independent of the volume of the reaction, showing that the effective concentrations of the membrane proteins should be defined with the volume of the lipid phase. The rates of conversion of progesterone and 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone to the product in a single cycle of the P450 C21 reaction were measured with a reaction rapid quenching device. The first-order rate constant for the conversion of progesterone by P450 C21 was 4.3 +/- 0.7 s(-)1, and that for 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone was 1.8 +/- 0.5 s(-)1 at 37 degrees C. It was found from the analysis of kinetic data that the rate-determining step in 21-hydroxylation of progesterone in the steady state was the dissociation of product from P450 C21, whereas the conversion to deoxycortisol was the rate-determining step in the reaction of 17alpha-hydroxyprogesterone. The difference in the rate-determining steps in the reactions for the two substrates was clearly demonstrated in the pre-steady-state kinetics.  相似文献   

11.
Sodium nitroprusside, a potent activator of soluble guanylate cyclase, potentiated mixed disulfide formation between cystine, a potent inhibitor of the cyclase, and enzyme purified from rat lung. Incubation of soluble guanylate cyclase with nitroprusside and [35S]cystine resulted in a twofold increase in protein-bound radioactivity compared to incubations in the absence of nitroprusside. Purified enzyme preincubated with nitroprusside and then gel filtered (activated enzyme) was activated 10- to 20-fold compared to guanylate cyclase preincubated in the absence of nitroprusside and similarly processed (nonactivated enzyme). This activation was completely reversed by subsequent incubation at 37 degrees C (activation-reversed enzyme). Incorporation of [35S]cystine into guanylate cyclase was increased twofold with activated enzyme, while no difference was observed with activation-reversed enzyme, compared to nonactivated enzyme. Cystine decreased the activity of nonactivated and activation-reversed enzyme about 40% while it completely inhibited activated guanylate cyclase. Mg+2- or Mn+2-GTP inhibited the incorporation of [35S]cystine into nonactivated or activated guanylate cyclase. Also, diamide, a potent thiol oxidant that converts juxtaposed sulfhydryls to disulfides, completely blocked incorporation of [35S]cystine into nonactivated or activated guanylate cyclase. These data indicate that activation of soluble guanylate cyclase by nitroprusside results in an increased availability of protein sulfhydryl groups for mixed disulfide formation with cystine. Protection against mixed disulfide formation with diamide or substrate suggests that these groups exist as two or more juxtaposed sulfhydryl groups at the active site or a site on the enzyme that regulates catalytic activity. Differential inhibition by mixed disulfide formation of nonactivated and activated enzyme suggests a mechanism for amplification of the on-off signal for soluble guanylate cyclase within cells.  相似文献   

12.
We have investigated the interactions of ligand with the canine hepatic glucagon receptor. Whereas time courses for radiolabeled glucagon binding to receptor and dissociation from receptor revealed fast and slow components at both 30 and 4 degrees C, time courses of ligand dissociation revealed a third component of irreversibly cell-associated (nondissociable) ligand only at the higher temperature. Related experiments identified that (a) the initial rate of formation of nondissociable ligand was slower than that of dissociably bound hormone; (b) the fraction of ligand bound to nondissociable sites achieved a plateau during extended incubations, whereas that bound to dissociable sites was seen to rise and then slowly to fall; (c) the kinetics of formation of a nondissociable ligand was consistent with linked, sequential reactions; (d) dissociable ligand-receptor complexes formed at 4 degrees C were converted to nondissociable complexes during subsequent incubation at 30 degrees C, and (e) nondissociable sites were filled by prior incubation of cells with unlabeled ligand. Analysis of receptor-bound hormone resulting from the incubation of cells with 125I-labeled glucagon and selected concentrations of either glucagon or [[127I]iodo-Tyr10]glucagon at steady state revealed in each case four components of receptor-bound ligand: those corresponding to high and low affinity components of dissociably bound ligand and to high and low affinity components of nondissociably bound ligand. Implications of these findings are considered in terms of mechanisms for the formation of irreversibly bound hormone and for the distribution of hormone among the various components of hepatic glucagon-binding sites.  相似文献   

13.
The activation of the estrogen receptor (ER) from N-nitrosomethylurea (NMU)-induced rat mammary tumors was studied in vitro. The activation of the receptor induced by heating of the cytosol containing occupied ER was measured by a 3-4-fold increase of receptor binding to nuclei in comparison with the nuclear binding of the nonactivated ER. The activation of the ER was further shown by alteration of the elution profile from DEAE-cellulose. A shift of the receptor peak from 234 mM (Peak II, nonactivated ER) to 70 mM (Peak I, activated ER) phosphate buffer could be obtained. The overall recoveries of activated ER following chromatography on DEAE-cellulose were significantly lower than the recoveries of the nonactivated ER, 71 and 85%, respectively. Binding of the activated ER to nuclei and chromatography of the supernatant which is not able to bind to nuclei on DEAE-cellulose resulted in a decrease of Peak I and in an increase of the overall recovery. These findings suggest that the nuclear bound ER consists of two parts. One is represented partially by Peak I of the elution profile and the other one by that part of the receptor which can not be eluted from the column under the conditions used. Furthermore, the dissociation of tritiated estradiol (E3H) from the nonactivated ER followed a two component exponential function whereas after activation a monophasic dissociation curve could be observed. The mean half times for the dissociation of E3H from the activated and nonactivated ER were 101 and 7.2 min, respectively. Finally, the nonactivated molybdate stabilized ER sedimented in 5-20% sucrose density gradients as two peaks, one at 9.5 S and the other at 4 S. After activation of the ER only the smaller 4 S peak was evident. Molybdate inhibited the activation of the ER measured by nuclear binding assays, sucrose density gradient analysis, dissociation kinetics or ion exchange chromatography but not completely in every case.  相似文献   

14.
A detailed kinetic study was performed to investigate the interaction of glucagon with receptors on freshly isolated hepatocytes. Competition binding assay results fit a mathematical expression for a single site noncooperative model of binding. Glucagon was shown to bind with first-order kinetics at six-hormone concentrations (0.02-0.50 nM) at 0 and 37 degrees C. The observed pseudo-first-order rate constants are directly proportional to the hormone concentration at 0 degree C, but display a downward deviation from linearity at 37 degrees C. Dissociation of glucagon exhibited biexponential character at 37 degrees C which was not seen at 0 degree C. The biphasic dissociation at 37 degrees C was resolved into rapid (t1/2 = 1.9 min) and slow (t1/2 = 27.7 min) components. The distribution of the total bound hormone between the rapidly and slowly dissociating complexes was not dependent upon the extent of receptor occupancy. The absolute quantity of rapidly dissociating hormone-receptor complexes was constant at all times examined; however, the fraction of slowly dissociating hormone-receptor complexes was found to increase with increasing incubation time. The results indicate that a homogeneous population of hepatic receptors undergoes a time-dependent, temperature-dependent conversion from one state to another in a two-stage sequential manner.  相似文献   

15.
Cytosolic and nuclear estrogen receptor forms of chicken oviduct have been studied by (1) measuring hormone dissociation kinetics and by (2) sucrose density gradient analysis on high salt gradients. Estradiol dissociates from the receptor in chicken oviduct cytosol at 22 degrees C following a two-phase exponential process. The fraction of receptor with a fast dissociation rate (k = 120 X 10(-3) min-1) decreases as a function of the pre-incubation at 22 degrees C; after prolonged pre-incubation only the slowly dissociating (k = 12.3 X 10(-3) min-1) form remains. Dissociation of moxestrol, a synthetic estrogen with a higher affinity, from the cytosol receptor at 30 degrees C is similar, showing a transition of a fast dissociating form (k = 120 X 10(-3) min-1) to a slowly dissociating form (k = 7.6 X 10(-3) min-1) as a result of pre-incubation at 30 degrees C. A concomitant temperature-dependent shift of the estrogen receptor from a 4.8 S to a 6.1 S form was observed with moxestrol but not with estradiol as a ligand. Sodium molybdate (20 mM) and NaSCN (400 mM) inhibit the temperature-dependent increase in sedimentation coefficient, but molybdate allows the formation of a receptor form which shows intermediary dissociation kinetics. Estrogen receptor, precipitated with ammonium sulfate (0-35%) shows monophasic dissociation kinetics of estradiol (k = 39.5 X 10(-3) min-1) and for moxestrol (k = 10.8 X 10(-3) min-1), suggesting full receptor activation only with moxestrol as a ligand. Moxestrol-receptor complexes obtained by ammonium sulfate precipitation sediment at 0 degree C at 4.8 S. Only after subsequent incubation at 30 degrees C a shift from 4.8 S to 5.9 S is observed, suggesting that the formation of the slowly dissociating form of the receptor may precede the formation of a stable transformed receptor complex. The nuclear estrogen receptor with estradiol as a ligand shows biphasic dissociation kinetics at 22 degrees C (k = 70 X 10(-3) min-1; k = 14.0 X 10(-3) min-1). The ratio of both components (1:1) does not change after preincubation of the nuclear receptor extract at 22 degrees C. Moxestrol dissociates from the nuclear receptor at 30 degrees C monophasically with a slow rate (k = 6.1 X 10(-3) min-1), suggesting that it is extracted as an activated hormone-receptor complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Dilution at 0 degrees of rat liver cytosol incubated with [3H]triamcinolone acetonide provoked an enhanced binding of steroid-receptor complexes to nuclei. The explanation of this phenomenon was found to be an "activation" of the complexes. Dilution acted by decreasing the concentration of a cytosol inhibitor. This reaction was irreversible at 0 degrees: once activated the complexes could not be reversed to the nonactivated state by the addition of inhibitor. The presence of hormone was necessary, since hormone-free receptor molecules could not be activated by dilution. Removal of the inhibitor did not lead to activation of all complexes: after 24 h a "plateau" was attained where 55 to 70% of the complexes were activated. The inhibitor was shown to be a low molecular weight molecule by dialysis, Sephadex G-25 chromatography, ammonium sulfate precipitation, and ultrafiltration. Thus [3H]triamcinolone acetonide-receptor complexes present in a cytosol from which the inhibitor had been removed by Sephadex G-25 chromatography became spontaneously activated at low ionic strength and at 0 degrees. The inhibitor is not a steroid (at least of usual polarity) since it cannot be extracted by methylene chloride or adsorbed by activated charcoal. It is thermostable (resists to 30 min at 100 degrees). Its removal by incubation with a cation exchange resin suggests that it may be positively charged, however it is not complexed by EDTA. This inhibitor must be distinguished from a previously described inhibitor of steroid-receptor complexes binding to nuclei. The latter compound has been shown in various systems to be responsible for an artifactual saturation of nuclear acceptor by steroid-receptor complexes. It inhibits the binding to nuclear acceptors of already activated complexes and is probably a macromolecule. It is thus different from the low molecular weight activation inhibitor described in the present paper.  相似文献   

17.
The kinetics of formation and of dissociation of open complexes (RPo) between Escherichia coli RNA polymerase (R) and the lambda PR promoter (P) have been studied as a function of temperature in the physiological range using the nitrocellulose filter binding assay. The kinetic data provide further evidence for the mechanism R + P in equilibrium I1 in equilibrium I2 in equilibrium RPo, where I1 and I2 are kinetically distinguishable intermediate complexes at this promoter which do not accumulate under the reaction conditions investigated. The overall second-order association rate constant (ka) increases dramatically with increasing temperature, yielding a temperature-dependent activation energy in the range 20 kcal (near 37 degrees C) to 40 kcal (near 13 degrees C) (1 kcal = 4.184 kJ). Both isomerization steps (I1----I2 and I2----RPo) appear to be highly temperature dependent. Except at low temperatures (less than 13 degrees C) the step I1----I2, which we attribute to a conformational change in the polymerase with a large negative delta Cp degrees value, is rate-limiting at the reactant concentrations investigated and hence makes the dominant contribution to the apparent activation energy of the pseudo first-order association reaction. The subsequent step I2----RPo, which we attribute to DNA melting, has a higher activation energy (in excess of 100 kcal) but only becomes rate-limiting at low temperature (less than 13 degrees C). The initial binding step R + P in equilibrium I1 appears to be in equilibrium on the time-scale of the isomerization reactions under all conditions investigated; the equilibrium constant for this step is not a strong function of temperature and is approximately 10(7) M-1 under the standard ionic conditions of the assay (40 mM-Tris . HCl (pH 8.0), 10 mM-MgCl2, 0.12 M-KC1). The activation energy of the dissociation reaction becomes increasingly negative at low temperatures, ranging from approximately -9 kcal near 37 degrees C to -30 kcal near 13 degrees C. Thermodynamic (van't Hoff) enthalpies delta H degrees of open complex formation consequently are large and temperature-dependent, increasing from approximately 29 to 70 kcal as the temperature is reduced from 37 to 13 degrees C. The corresponding delta Cp degrees value is approximately -2.4 kcal/deg. We propose that this large negative delta Cp degrees value arises primarily from the burial of hydrophobic surface in the conformational change (I1 in equilibrium I2) in RNA polymerase in the key second step of the mechanism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
We have previously shown that the biological efficacy of an antiglucocorticoid is directly related to its affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor in whole cells at 37 degrees C. We have also shown that RU 486-receptor complexes differ from other antiglucocorticoid-receptor complexes in so far as their affinity is as high at 37 degrees C in whole cells as at 0 degree C in a cell-free system, whereas a decrease by a factor of 5-10 is observed with the other antagonists. The aim of the present paper was to evaluate the contributions of temperature and cellular integrity (or the biological events linked to temperature and cellular integrity) to the affinity of a steroid for its receptor for the purpose of determining the parameters favorable to high affinity, which is the prerequisite of a potent antagonist. We provide evidence showing that: (1) an increase in temperature has an unfavorable effect on the affinity of a glucocorticoid for its receptor (4-6-fold decrease between 0 and 37 degrees C), (2) RU 486, like an agonist, forms a complex with the cytosolic glucocorticoid receptor, which satisfies the criteria for an "activated" complex under "in vitro activating treatment", (3) these biological post-binding events (either agonistic or otherwise nature), which change the nature of the complexes, contribute to compensating for the negative effect of rising temperatures on their apparent dissociation constant. We conclude that potent antiglucocorticoids must have a chemical structure allowing them to induce biological post-binding events, such as receptor activation, but in an abortive form which thus effectively "traps" the receptor in a non-functional state.  相似文献   

19.
In cell-free systems androgen receptor (AR) labeled with (3H)DHT at 0 degrees C in the presence of 50mM molybdate remains unactivated (less than 3% binding to nuclei) and untransformed (7-8S on sucrose density gradients containing 0.4M KCl and 50mM molybdate). In the absence of molybdate, however, these complexes undergo activation and transformation even at 0 degrees C, albeit, very slowly. Incubation of unactivated, untransformed AR complexes at 18 degrees C, or at 0 degrees C in the presence of 0.4M KCl, greatly accelerated both activation and transformation. Activation and transformation are also associated with formation of high affinity (3H)DHT-receptor complexes as indicated by decreased rates of (3H)DHT dissociation from the receptor. Cytosolic AR complexes labeled with (3H)DHT in tissue slices at 37 degrees C, or in vivo, undergo rapid activation, transformation and nuclear translocation. The data suggest that activation and transformation of cytosolic AR in cell-free systems is associated with changes in the physicochemical properties of AR similar to those occurring upon hormone binding in intact cells and in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
Red blood cells of several species are known to exhibit a ouabain-insensitive, anion-dependent K+ (Rb+) flux that is stimulated by cell swelling. We have used rabbit red cells to study the kinetics of activation and inactivation of the flux upon step changes in tonicity. Sudden hypotonic swelling (210 mosmol) activates the flux after a lag period of 10 min at 37 degrees C and 30-50 min at 25 degrees C. In cells that were preswollen to activate the transporter, sudden shrinkage (by addition of hypertonic NaCl) causes a rapid inactivation of the flux; the time lag for inactivation is less than 2 min at 37 degrees C. A minimal model of the volume-sensitive KCl transport system requires two states of the transporter. The activated (A) state catalyzes transport at some finite rate (turnover number unknown because the number of transporters is unknown). The resting (R) state has a much lower or possibly zero transport rate. The interconversion between the states is characterized by unimolecular rate constants R k12 in equilibrium with k21 A. The rate of relaxation to any new steady state is equal to the sum of the rate constants k12 + k21. Because the rate of transport activation in a hypotonic medium is lower than the rate of inactivation in an isotonic medium, we conclude that the volume-sensitive rate process is inactivation (the A to R transition); that is, cell swelling activates transport by lowering k21. Three phosphatase inhibitors (fluoride, orthovanadate, and inorganic phosphate) all inhibit the swelling-activated flux and also slow down the rate of approach to the swollen steady state. This finding suggests that a net dephosphorylation is necessary for activation of the flux and that the net dephosphorylation takes place as a result of swelling-induced inhibition of a kinase rather than stimulation of a phosphatase.  相似文献   

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