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1.
The specific glucocorticoid binding capacity in cytosols prepared from L929 mouse fibroblasts (L cells) is inactivated with a half-life of approximately 2 h at 25 degrees C. As previously published, this inactivation can be prevented with 10 mM molybdate and markedly slowed by addition of other phosphatase inhibitors such as glucose 1-phosphate and fluoride. We have now found that ATP (5 to 10 mM) also slows the rate of this inactivation. After extensively inactivating the receptor by preincubating cytosol at 25 degrees C for 4 and preventing further inactivation by addition of molybdate, addition of ATP results in reactivation of the steroid binding capacity. Maximal reactivation of 40 to 70% is achieved with 5 to 10 mM ATP. The activation is temperature-dependent and specific for ATP. ADP, GTP, CTP, and UTP do not cause activation and preliminary results indicate no effect of cyclic nucleotides in this system. If activation is prevented by addition of 10 mM EDTA to the cytosol, addition of 3 to 10 mM magnesium permits ATP-dependent activation of the binding capacity. The level of reactivation can be enhanced by addition of a heat-stable factor prepared from the same L cell supernatant. These results support the proposal that L cell glucocorticoid receptors can be activated to the glucocorticoid binding state by an ATP-dependent phosphorylation mechanism.  相似文献   

2.
Heparin dramatically enhanced the rate of unbound glucocorticoid receptor inactivation in vitro in a concentration, time and temperature-dependent manner. Control specific binding decreased only about 25% after incubation for 6 h at 4°C. However in the presence of heparin (40 μg per ml cytosol) receptor binding decreased about 75%. At 25°C liver receptor specific binding was found to have a half0life of about 60 min in control cytosol. However, in the presence of heparin (40 μg per ml cytosol) the glucocorticoid receptor had a half-life of only 15 min at 25°C. Interestingly, 10 mM molybdate (with or without 5 mM dithiothreitol) greatly inhibited heparin-dependent receptor inactivation at 4°C. Dithiothreitol (alone) significantly stabilized receptor binding in control samples at 4°C, but provided no protection from heparin-dependent receptor inactivation. Heparin had no apparent inactivating effect on prebound glucocorticoid receptor complexes at 4°C. Interestingly however, heparin altered the sedimentation coefficient of prebound hepatic glucococorticoid-receptor complexes in low salt gradients from 7–8 S to about 3–4 S. When molybdate plus dithiothreitol were added with heparin, the sedimentation coefficient was found to be approx. 6—7 S. These results demonstrate that heparin, which is often used pharmacologically and which occurs naturally in animal tissues, has significant effects on liver glucocorticoid receptors in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
Hydrogen peroxide and diamide inactivate the steroid-binding capacity of unoccupied glucocorticoid receptors in rat liver cytosol at 0 degrees C, and steroid-binding capacity is reactivated with dithiothreitol. Treatment of cytosol with peroxide or sodium molybdate, but not diamide, inhibits the irreversible inactivation (i.e., inactivation not reversed by dithiothreitol) of steroid-binding capacity that occurs when cytosol is incubated at 25 degrees C. Pretreatment of cytosol with the thiol derivatizing agent methyl methanethiosulfonate at 0 degrees C prevents the ability of peroxide, but not molybdate, to stabilize binding capacity at 25 degrees C. As derivatization of thiol groups prevents peroxide stabilization of steroid-binding capacity and as treatment with dithiothreitol reverses the effect, we propose that peroxide acts by promoting the formation of new disulfide linkages. The receptor in our rat liver cytosol preparations is present as three major degradation products of Mr 40,000, 52,000, and 72,000 in addition to the Mr 94,000 intact receptor. Like the intact receptor, these three forms exist in the presence of molybdate as an 8-9S complex, they bind glucocorticoid in a specific manner, and they copurify with the intact Mr 94,000 receptor on sequential phosphocellulose and DNA-cellulose chromatography. Despite the existence of receptor cleavage products, it is clear that peroxide does not stabilize steroid-binding capacity by inhibiting receptor cleavage.  相似文献   

4.
Treatment of rat liver cytosol with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) or sodium molybdate (MoO4(2-)) inhibits thermal inactivation of glucocorticoid receptor steroid-binding capacity at 25 degrees C. Dithiothreitol (DTT) prevents the stabilization of receptors by H2O2. Heating (25 degrees C) of immune pellets formed by immunoadsorption of L-cell murine glucocorticoid receptor complexes to protein-A-Sepharose with an anti-receptor monoclonal antibody (BuGR2) results in dissociation of the M 90,000 heat shock protein (hsp90) from the steroid binding protein. Such thermal-induced dissociation of hsp90 is inhibited by H2O2. Pretreatment of immunoadsorbed receptor complexes with the thiol derivatizing agent, methyl methanethiosulfonate (MMTS) prevents the ability of H2O2 to stabilize the hsp90-receptor interaction. These data suggest a role for hsp90 in maintaining an active steroid-binding conformation of the glucocorticoid receptor.  相似文献   

5.
The physicochemical properties of complexes formed between the glucocorticoid antagonist, RU38486, and the glucocorticoid receptor in rat thymus cytosol were investigated and compared with those of complexes formed with the potent agonist, triamcinolone acetonide. The equilibrium dissociation constant for the interaction of [3H]RU38486 with the molybdate-stabilized glucocorticoid receptor was lower than that for [1,2,4-3H]triamcinolone acetonide at 0 degree C but higher at 25 degrees C, suggesting that hydrophobic interactions play a major role in the binding of RU38486. Differences in equilibrium constants were reflected in corresponding differences in dissociation rate constants; association rate constants for the two steroids were similar. The rate of dissociation of [3H]RU38486 from the glucocorticoid receptor was higher in the absence of molybdate than in its presence both at 0 degree C and at 25 degrees C, suggesting that molybdate modifies the physical state of the antagonist-receptor complex, but other physical properties were similar both in the presence and in the absence of molybdate. The rate of inactivation of the unoccupied glucocorticoid receptor at 25 degrees C in the absence of molybdate was lower in phosphate buffer than in Tris-HCl buffer but the rate of dissociation of [3H]RU38486 was the same in both buffers. The binding of RU38486 afforded little, if any, protection against inactivation in either buffer; [3H]RU38486 dissociated irreversibly from the inactivated receptor at the same rate as from the non-inactivated complex but molybdate had no effect on the dissociation kinetics of the inactivated complex. It is concluded that RU38486 interacts with the ground state of the glucocorticoid receptor in a manner which neither promotes receptor transformation nor prevents receptor inactivation.  相似文献   

6.
The in vitro stability of the Ah receptor from rat hepatic cytosol was evaluated by [3H]TCDD binding studies, gel filtration, and sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation. Thermal inactivation of unoccupied receptor followed first-order kinetics between 5 and 40 degrees C, with an estimated Ea for inactivation of approximately 35 kcal/mol. Protease inhibitors did not reduce and dilution slightly increased the inactivation rate at 20 degrees C. Recovery and 20 degrees C stability decreased with increasing ionic strength. The TCDD-receptor complex was less susceptible to degradation at 20 degrees C, even in the presence of 0.4 M KCl. Specific binding was markedly pH dependent, with maximum recovery at 7.6. Analysis of the pH curve suggested that cysteine sulfhydryl groups may be involved in TCDD binding. Dithiothreitol (1 mM) maximized recovery and 20 degrees C stability, and addition of the thiol largely reactivated binding sites lost from cytosol prepared without it. Removal of low molecular weight components of cytosol by gel filtration resulted in a rapid 20 degrees C inactivation rate that could not be lessened by dithiothreitol. Glycerol (10% v/v) and EDTA (1.5 mM) maximized recovery of specific binding, but both decreased 20 degrees C stability in a concentration-dependent manner. Calcium chloride (4 mM) increased stability at 20 degrees C by approximately 20%, and retarded the characteristic shift in sedimentation coefficient from approximately 9 to approximately 6 S in high-salt sucrose gradients. The fact that sodium molybdate (20 mM) decreased recovery and 20 degrees C stability when dithiothreitol was present but slightly increased stability in its absence suggested an antagonism between the two compounds. Molybdate mitigated the inactivation induced by 0.4 M KCl, an effect which may be related to the observation of dual peaks in molybdate-containing high-salt sucrose gradients. These data indicate that thermal inactivation of the unoccupied rat hepatic Ah receptor primarily may be due to physical rather than enzymatic processes; (ii) sulfhydryl oxidation, removal of low molecular weight cytosolic components, and high ionic strength result in rapid rates of inactivation at 20 degrees C; and (iii) the large degree of protection conferred by TCDD binding implies a very tight ligand-receptor interaction, and as such accords with TCDDs extraordinary potency and persistence in producing its toxic and biochemical effects.  相似文献   

7.
Extraction of rat liver cytosol with 10% charcoal at 4 degrees C inactivates specific glucocorticoid-binding capacity. The steroid-binding capacity of extracted cytosol can be restored by adding dithiothreitol or by incubating with boiled liver cytosol at 20 degrees C in the presence of 10 mM sodium molybdate. Two components of boiled cytosol are required for receptor activation: NADPH and an endogenous heat-stable protein with an apparent Mr of 12,300 by Sephadex G-50 chromatography. This endogenous receptor-activating protein coelutes on Sephadex G-50 chromatography with endogenous thioredoxin activity, and it can be replaced in the activating system by purified Escherichia coli thioredoxin. These observations suggest that glucocorticoid receptors in cytosol preparations are maintained in a reduced, steroid-binding state by a NADPH-dependent, thioredoxin-mediated reducing system.  相似文献   

8.
The ATP-dependent phosphoenzyme formation and its reversal were studied at 0 degrees C and pH 7.0 in the ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum. Addition of KCl or several other salts (approximately 100 mM) decreased the maximum rate of ADP-induced dephosphorylation of phosphoenzyme as well as the apparent affinity of the phosphoenzyme toward ADP. High ATP had a similar effect on the latter, whereas it had little effect on the former. In contrast, high KCl or a considerable change in the ionic strength had little effect on the initial rate of phosphoenzyme formation at saturating ATP concentrations. During steady state phosphorylation at 1.0 mM MgCl2 and 5.0 mM CaCl2 in the absence of added KCl, a significant amount of [gamma-32P]ATP remained bound to the enzyme even when the enzyme concentration was much in excess over that of [gamma-32P]ATP. Evidence is presented that this enzyme-ATP complex represents a precursor to the phosphoenzyme. ATP dissociated slowly (0.20 s-1) from this enzyme-ATP complex and addition of high KCl or other salts accelerated its dissociation. In contrast, when the enzyme was complexed with adenyl-5'-yl (beta, gamma-methylene)diphosphonate in the absence of added KCl under these conditions, dissociation of the nucleotide from the complex as estimated in the displacement experiment with [gamma-32P]ATP, was found to be much faster than that of ATP.  相似文献   

9.
Glutamine synthetase of plants is the physiological target of tabtoxinine-beta-lactam, a toxin produced by several disease-causing pathovars of Pseudomonas syringae. This toxin, a unique amino acid, is an active site-directed, irreversible inhibitor of glutamine synthetase from pea. ATP is required for inactivation. Neither ADP, AMP, nor adenosine 5'-(beta,gamma-methylene)triphosphate (AMP-PCP) supports inactivation. Adenyl-5'-yl imidophosphate (AMP-PNP) is slowly hydrolyzed by glutamine synthetase to produce adenyl-5'-yl phosphoramidate (AMP-PN) and inorganic phosphate as identified by 31P NMR spectroscopic analysis. AMP-PNP also supports a slow inactivation of glutamine synthetase by tabtoxinine-beta-lactam. These data are consistent with gamma-phosphate transfer being involved in the inactivation. Completely inactivated glutamine synthetase has 0.9 mumol of toxin bound/mumol of subunit. One mumol of ATP is bound per mumol of subunit of glutamine synthetase in the absence of either the toxin or another active site-directed inhibitor, methionine sulfoximine; whereas, a 2nd mumol of either [alpha- or gamma-32P]ATP is bound per mumol of subunit when glutamine synthetase is incubated in the presence of either toxin or methionine sulfoximine until all enzyme activity is lost. These data suggest that the gamma-phosphate hydrolyzed from ATP during inactivation remains with the enzyme-inhibitor complex, as well as the ADP. The open chain form, tabtoxinine, was neither a reversible nor an irreversible inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, suggesting that the beta-lactam ring is necessary for inhibition. The inactivation of glutamine synthetase with tabtoxinine-beta-lactam is pseudo-first-order when done in buffer containing 15% (v/v) ethylene glycol. The rate constant for this reaction is 3 X 10(-2) S-1, and the Ki for the toxin is 1 mM. Removal of the ethylene glycol from the buffer allows the reaction to proceed in a non-first-order manner with the apparent rate constant decreasing with time. As the enzyme is inactivated in these conditions, the binding affinity for the toxin appears to decrease, while the Km observed for glutamate does not change.  相似文献   

10.
Cytosolic aldosterone-protein complexes are isolated from rat kidney slices after incubation with [3H]aldosterone and dexamethasone. Activated and unactivated forms of the complex are characterized by gel electrophoresis and hydroxyapatite chromatography after incubation at 4 degrees C and 25 degrees C respectively. It is found that the activated form reaches a maximum after 30 min at 25 degrees C and can be separated as an homogeneous peak by electrophoresis. Intermediate forms can also be identified. In the presence of 10 mM ATP, activation immediately occurs at 4 degrees C and is almost complete. In the presence of 10 mM molybdate, the activation is strongly enhanced and the increase in activated form may be about fifteen-fold whether molybdate is added during kidney homogenization or just before incubation at 25 degrees C. On the other hand molybdate reduces to one third the binding of the aldosterone-receptor complexes to nuclei. In the presence of the steroid RU 26988 which is a pure glucocorticoid, experiments done on aldosterone-receptors complexes and their binding to nuclei are confirmed. This proves that aldosterone is specific for mineralocorticoid sites. The general pattern of the mineralocorticoid receptor activation is discussed and its resemblance to the case of other steroid hormones is emphasized.  相似文献   

11.
The specific glucocorticoid receptor binding of rat liver cytosol was very unstable in vitro at 25 and 4 degrees C. However, 5 mM CaCl2 added with 5 mM EDTA to cytosol prior to incubation markedly stabilized unbound glucocorticoid receptors at both temperatures. Optimal effectiveness was achieved using equimolar (5 mM) amounts of CaCl2 and EDTA. On the other hand, 5 mM CaCl2 (added alone) further destabilized the unbound glucocorticoid receptor, while 5 mM EDTA (added alone) had no effect at 25 degrees C. EGTA (in lieu of EDTA) added with CaCl2 stabilized hepatic receptor binding at 25 degrees C. On the other hand, citrate added with calcium was ineffective in stabilizing the hepatic glucocorticoid receptor. MgCl2 effectively replaced CaCl2 as a stabilizing agent at 25 degrees C if added with 5 mM EDTA. When added alone, MgCl2 slightly destabilized the unbound receptor. Sucrose density gradient analysis (in low salt) revealed that CaCl2 plus EDTA enhanced the steroid-receptor complex sedimentation coefficient from 7 S to about 10 S. Unlike molybdate, CaCl2 plus EDTA had no apparent effect on steroid-receptor complex thermal transformation into a nuclear binding form, while MgCl2 plus EDTA partially reduced transformation. These results suggest a novel means to chemically stabilize unbound hepatic glucocorticoid receptors in vitro which may be of particular importance for receptor purification studies.  相似文献   

12.
In structure and general mode of action, the Ah receptor is very similar to the receptors for steroid hormones. Molybdate previously has been shown to be highly effective at preserving ligand-binding function in steroid receptors during their exposure to elevated temperature or high ionic strength and at stabilizing steroid receptors as high molecular weight oligomeric complexes. Since such stabilization by molybdate can be very useful during characterization and purification of receptors, we tested the effects of molybdate on the Ah receptor to determine if the Ah receptor, like the receptors for steroid hormones, might be stabilized. In hepatic cytosols from C57BL/6N mice and Sprague-Dawley rats, molybdate concentrations up to 30 mM in homogenizing and analysis buffers did not alter the concentration of specific Ah receptor sites detected by binding of [3H]2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin. However, inclusion of 20 mM molybdate in the homogenizing buffer did significantly protect unliganded Ah receptor from thermal inactivation at 20 degrees C and from KCl-induced loss of ligand-binding ability. In accord with previous reports, 20 mM molybdate in homogenizing and analysis buffers greatly increased the concentration of detectable glucocorticoid receptor in rat hepatic cytosol and estrogen receptor in rat uterine cytosol. Exposure to 0.4 M KC1 caused the glucocorticoid receptor from rat liver to shift sedimentation from approximately equal to 8 S to approximately equal to 4 S and caused a severe loss of specific glucocorticoid binding. Presence of 20 mM molybdate stabilized the glucocorticoid receptor as a single discrete peak sedimenting at approximately equal to 8 S. In contrast, the Ah receptor from rat liver exposed to 0.4 M KC1 in the presence of molybdate sedimented as biphasic peaks; one peak (approximately equal to 9.5 S) corresponded to the form of Ah receptor observed at low ionic strength, while the other peak (approximately equal to 5.5 S) corresponded to the form of Ah receptor seen in cytosol treated with 0.4 M KC1 in the absence of molybdate. Addition of heparin to hepatic cytosols from mice or rats shifted sedimentation of Ah receptor from approximately equal to 9.5 S to approximately equal to 5.5 S. Molybdate, again, provided stabilization in the approximately equal to 9.5 S form, but only for about one-half the total Ah receptor content in both rat and mouse hepatic cytosols. In sum, molybdate is far less effective at stabilizing rodent Ah receptors than it is at stabilizing steroid receptors in the same species.  相似文献   

13.
The inactivation of glucocorticoid receptors that occurs when cytosol is heated at 25 degrees C is blocked reversibly by molybdate and slowed by some other phosphatase inhibitors such as fluoride and glucose 1-phosphate. Molybdate is also capable of preventing nonenzymatic inactivation of unbound receptors caused by exposure to salt or precipitation with ammonium sulfate at 0 degrees C. Inactivation of unbound receptors caused by Sephadex G-50 gel filtration is prevented by all three inhibitors. Both molybdate and tungstate block temperature-dependent transformation of glucocorticoid.receptor complexes to the DNA-binding state, where fluoride and glucose 1-phosphate have no effect. Transformation brought about at 0 degrees C by salt, ammonium sulfate precipitation, or gel filtration is also blocked by both molybdate and tungstate. Tungstate differs from molybdate in that it has little or no effect on receptor inactivation. Fluoride and glucose 1-phosphate do not inhibit transformation. These observations support the proposal that molybdate and tungstate are interacting through a reversible association with the glucocorticoid receptor itself. We propose that they may act by forming a complex with a phosphate moiety on the receptor.  相似文献   

14.
A majority of the untransformed glucocorticoid-receptor complexes (GRc) from rat liver cytosol sedimented in the 9S region in 5-20% sucrose gradients containing 0.15 M KCl and 20 mM Na2MoO4. Incubation of the cytosol at 23 degrees C, or at 0 degree C with 10 mM ATP or 0.3 M KCl caused appearance of a slower migrating (4S) form which exhibited an increased affinity toward DNA-cellulose and ATP-Sepharose. Presence of 20 mM Na2MoO4 blocked this 9S to 4S transformation of GRc. A complete conversion of the 9S to the 4S form occurred upon a 2 h incubation of GRc with 10 mM ATP at 0 degree C. Other nucleoside triphosphates (GTP, CTP, and UTP), ADP and PPi (but not AMP or cAMP) were also effective in transforming the 9S form. The heat transformation occurred in a time-dependent manner and was complete within 1 h at 23 degrees C; presence of 10 mM ATP during this 23 degrees C incubation period allowed a complete 9S to 4S alteration in 10-20 min. Addition of ATP also accelerated the rate of salt activation of the GRc; a 50% conversion to the 4S form occurred in 20 min or 3 min in the absence or the presence of 10 mM ATP during the 0 degree C incubation of GRc with 0.15 M KCl. An absolute requirement of the hormone for 9S to 4S transformation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) was evident, as no conversion of the 9S form to the 4S form could be achieved with the ligand-free GR under any of the above conditions. Incubation of cytosol preparations at 23 degrees C or at 0 degree C with KCl or ATP caused dissociation of the GRc and reduced the steroid binding capacity of GR. Although aurintricarboxylic acid, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, Na2MoO4, Na2WO4, o-phenanthroline, Rifamycin AF/013 and heparin inhibited the ATP-Sepharose and DNA binding of the GRc, only Na2MoO4 and Na2WO4 selectively blocked the 9S to 4S conversion. We suggest that the 9S to 4S transformation in vitro of rat liver GRc represents an acquisition of DNA and ATP-Sepharose binding ability and may involve a separation of subunits from an oligomeric receptor structure.  相似文献   

15.
The glucocorticoid--receptor complex from freshly prepared rat liver cytosol is in a non-activated form, with very little affinity to bind to isolated nuclei. When such preparations were incubated with 5--10 mM-ATP at 4 degrees C, the receptor complex acquired the properties of an 'activated' transformed form, which readily bound to nuclei, ATP--Sepharose, phosphocellulose and DNA--cellulose. This transformation was comparable with the activation achieved by warming the steroid--receptor complex at 23 degrees C. The effect of ATP was specific, as it was more effective than ADP, whereas AMP had no such effect on activation. The process of receptor activation was sensitive to the presence of 10 mM-sodium molybdate; the latter blocked activation by both ATP and heat. Bivalent cations had no observable effect on the receptor activation at low temperature, but they decreased the extent of activation by ATP. The steroid-binding properties of glucocorticoid receptor remained intact under the above conditions. However, a significant increase in steroid binding occurred when ATP was preincubated with cytosol receptor before the addition of [3H]triamcinolone acetonide. ATP also stabilized the glucocorticoid--receptor complexes at 23 degrees C. These results suggest a role for ATP in receptor function and offer a convenient method of studying the activation process of glucocorticoid receptor under mild assay conditions.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Liver cytosol from adrenalectomized rats was prebound for 2 hr at 4°C with unlabeled 10–5 M corticosterone. After treatment of cytosol with dextran-coated charcoal to remove free steroid, samples were incubated at 15–25°C in the presence of 10 mM molybdate plus 5 mM dithiothreitol (followed by a 60 min incubation at 4°C). Essentially, complete exchange of [3H] dexamethasone for receptor-bound unlabeled steroid was observed after 120 min at 15°C, and near complete (80–95%) exchange occurred within 60 min at 25°C using these conditions. However in control, 5 mM dithiothreitol (alone) and 10 mM molybdate (alone) treated samples, less than 50% exchange was found. Using a similar protocol, only partial exchange was found in brain and kidney cytosols, suggesting at least partial specificity for the hepatic system. We have used this rapid, high temperature exchange assay to study the regulation of hepatic cytoplasmic glucocorticoid receptors under some experimental conditions.  相似文献   

17.
The activation of the rat uterine oestrogen receptor has been measured in vitro by its binding to oligodeoxythymidylate cellulose (oligo(dT] and was found to be sensitive to the time and temperature of prior incubation of cytosol with oestradiol. The presence of 20 mM dithiothreitol promoted receptor activation and was partially inhibited by 10 mM molybdate; molybdate also inhibited the time- and temperature-dependent activation of receptor. The nucleotides GTP, ATP, ADP, CTP and UTP all promoted receptor activation; the effect of GTP was significantly greater than that of ATP. It is unlikely that phosphate donation is involved in receptor activation as the effects of GTP could be reproduced by p[NH]ppG (guanosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imido]triphosphate), while PPi was also effective in activating receptor. The results provide evidence for the distinct regulation of the oligonucleotide- and ligand-binding domains, since manipulations which promoted binding to oligo(dT) did not affect either ligand binding capacity or the rate constant and composition the biphasic dissociation of the ligand receptor complex.  相似文献   

18.
Pertussis toxin catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of the guanyl nucleotide binding protein transducin was stimulated by adenine nucleotide and either phospholipids or detergents. To determine the sites of action of these agents, their effects were examined on the transducin-independent NAD glycohydrolase activity. Toxin-catalyzed NAD hydrolysis was increased synergistically by ATP and detergents or phospholipids; the zwitterionic detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS) was more effective than the nonionic detergent Triton X-100 greater than lysophosphatidylcholine greater than phosphatidylcholine. The A0.5 for ATP in the presence of CHAPS was 2.6 microM; significantly higher concentrations of ATP were required for maximal activation in the presence of cholate or lysophosphatidylcholine. In CHAPS, NAD hydrolysis was enhanced by ATP greater than ADP greater than AMP greater than adenosine; ATP was more effective than MgATP or the nonhydrolyzable analogue adenyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate. GTP and guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate were less active than the corresponding adenine nucleotides. Activity in the presence of CHAPS and ATP was almost completely dependent on dithiothreitol; the A0.5 for dithiothreitol was significantly decreased by CHAPS alone and, to a greater extent, by CHAPS and ATP. To determine the site of action of ATP, CHAPS, and dithiothreitol, the enzymatic (S1) and binding components (B oligomer) were resolved by chromatography. The purified S1 subunit catalyzed the dithiothreitol-dependent hydrolysis of NAD; activity was enhanced by CHAPS but not ATP. The studies are consistent with the conclusion that adenine nucleotides, dithiothreitol, and CHAPS act on the toxin itself rather than on the substrate; adenine nucleotides appear to be involved in the activation of toxin but not the isolated catalytic unit.  相似文献   

19.
The unactivated molybdate-stabilized glucocorticoid receptor (GcR) was purified from rat kidney cortex cytosol (RKcC) by using a modification of the procedure previously described by this laboratory for rat hepatic receptor. The purification includes affinity chromatography, gel filtration, and ion-exchange chromatography. The final preparation (approximately 1000-fold pure as determined from specific radioactivity) was used in subsequent physicochemical and functional analyses. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) showed a single heavily Coomassie-stained band at 90 kilodaltons. Density gradient ultracentrifugation indicated a sedimentation coefficient of 10.5 +/- 0.05 S (n = 2). Chromatography on an analytical gel filtration column produced a Stokes radius (Rs) of 6.4 +/- 0.07 nm (n = 5). The Rs was unchanged when the molybdate-stabilized GcR was analyzed in the presence of 400 mM KCl or when analyzed in the unpurified (cytosolic) state. In contrast, the hepatic GcR was observed to exist as a larger form in cytosol (7.7 +/- 0.2 nm). Following purification, or upon gel filtration analysis under hypertonic conditions, the Rs was similar to that of the unpurified RKcC GcR. Following removal of molybdate from RKcC GcR and thermal activation (25 degrees C/30 min), DNA-cellulose binding increased 1.5-2-fold over the unheated control. Addition of RKcC or hepatic cytosol (endogenous receptors thermally denatured at 90 degrees C/30 min or presaturated with 10(-7) M radioinert ligand) during thermal activation increased DNA-cellulose binding an additional 2-6-fold beyond the heated control.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Glucocorticoid receptor in rat liver cytosol is inactivated (rendered unable to bind steroid) by incubation with calf intestine alkaline phosphatase or highly purified rabbit muscle phosphoprotein phosphatase (phosphorylase phosphate, protein phosphatase C). The receptor is inactivated by both enzymes even when 10 mM sodium molybdate is present. Receptors that are inactivated by phosphatases in the presence of molybdate can be reactivated to the steroid-binding state by addition of dithiothreitol, but receptors that are inactivated in the absence of molybdate cannot be reactivated. These observations suggest that dephosphorylation leads to oxidation of a moiety (-SH) on the receptor that is required for steroid binding. Molybdate apparently preserves the receptor in a form such that reduction returns the receptor to the steroid binding state. We would propose that molybdate may act by complexing with sulfur groups on the receptor.  相似文献   

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