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1.
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   

2.
The rate of dissociation of labeled estradiol from [3H] estradiol-8-9 S receptor complexes ([3H]E2-8-9 S ER) molybdate-stabilized was determined in the presence of either an excess of unlabeled hormone ("chase") or of charcoal/dextran suspension ("stripping"). Biphasic dissociation of the hormone was observed in both cases, but the fraction of the fast-dissociating component was dramatically reduced (5% instead of 60%) when stripping was used. As the dissociation patterns were independent of the degree of saturation of the receptor, the results do not favor the possibility of cooperative effects between binding sites in the 8-9 S ER. After pretreatment of cytosol by charcoal at 28 degrees C for 15 min, the dissociation studied by chase displayed only the slowly dissociating component (t1/2 approximately 65 min). This effect was dependent on temperature and influenced by the ligand bound to 8-9 S ER, being pronounced with estradiol (E2) and absent with [3H]4-hydroxytamoxifen. The slow-dissociating component obtained after charcoal treatment was reconverted to fast-dissociating state by adding dithiothreitol or by incubation with cytosol at 20 degrees C. The charcoal treatment did not change the sedimentation coefficient (approximately 9 S) and the Stokes radius (approximately 7 nm) of the [3H]E2-8-9 S ER, and the slow-dissociating form obtained did not bind to DNA-cellulose either in the presence or absence of molybdate ions. Thus there are likely small but functionally significant changes of structure in the 8-9 S ER which remain in a non-DNA-binding form, whereas the rate of estradiol dissociation is modified.  相似文献   

3.
The cytosolic estrogen receptor (calf uterus) bound to estradiol (E2) at 0°C changes from a state with fast into a state with slow E2 dissociation rates when placed at 28°C. This temperature accelerated transition in receptor affinity for its ligand takes place within 10 min at 28°C. Similarly, receptor bound to estriol (E3) at 0°C changes, when heated, from a state with fast into a state with slow E3 dissociation. The main difference between RE2 and RE3 was that E3 dissociates from unheated 8S RE3 and heat-transformed 5S RE3 at a much faster rate than E2 from RE2;In the mature ovariectomized rat a slow dissociating 5S receptor estrogen complex is found in nuclei 1 h after injection of [3H]E2 or [3H]E3. In vitro dissociation of these 2 estrogens from this nuclear bound receptor formed in vivo takes place at rates similar to those from heat-transformed cytosolic RE2 or RE3 complexes.Addition of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) to the slow-dissociating heat-transformed 5S estrogen receptor complexes causes rapid dissociation of E2 or E3; this effect is dose-dependent and is not due to disruption of 5S dimers, since after PLP addition RE2; and RE3 sediment unchanged as 5S dimers.The presence of a large excess of non-radioactive 4S RE3 does not interfere with the temperature induced rapid transition of 4S R[3H]E2 complexes from the state with fast into a state with slow E2 dissociation kinetics.A model is presented to explain the temperature induced biphasic estrogen dissociation from the receptor. It is proposed that the low affinity 4S RE2 monomer undergoes a temperature and estrogen dependent conformation change, such that the ligand is “locked” into the receptor's binding site. This conformational change results in the formation of a high affinity 4S monomer from which estrogen dissociates at a slower rate. This reaction is independent from subsequent 4S to 5S dimerization (transformation). The different rates of ligand dissociation from the low and high affinity 4S receptors reflect the different interactions (hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding) of E2 and E3 with the estrogen binding domain.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The estrogen receptor from fetal guinea-pig uterus is recognised by two monoclonal antibodies (H222 and H226) developed against the human estrogen receptor but it interacts differently with each of them. The H222 antibody, whose epitope is located in the hormone-binding domain of the receptor, shifts the sedimentation coefficient of the nonactivated oligomeric receptor in low salt sucrose gradients from 9S to 11S. When this oligomeric receptor-H222 complex is centrifuged in high salt gradients, it dissociates to an 8S monomer-H222 complex, indicating that all the estradiol-binding units present in the nonactivated receptor can bind the H222 antibody. In contrast, the H226 antibody, whose epitope is located close to the DNA-binding domain, shifts the sedimentation coefficient of the nonactivated receptor only to 9.4S and when this complex sediments in high salt gradients, it dissociates to a 7S monomer-H226 complex plus a 4.5S monomeric receptor not bound to the antibody. This observation suggests that not all the H226 epitopes are accessible in the nonactivated receptor. On the other hand, the temperature-activated receptor reacts with the H226 antibody to form two complexes sedimenting at 7S and 9S in high salt gradients. This 9S complex indicates the formation of a homodimer that binds two molecules of the H226 antibody. However, only one H222 epitope seems to be accessible in this dimeric form of the receptor, since only one 8S complex is observed when the activated receptor reacts with the H222 antibody. In addition, binding to the H222 antibody before activation prevents the dimerisation. This suggests that the H222 epitope is near or directly involved in the dimerisation domain. Interaction of the H222 and H226 antibodies with the estrogen receptor reveals modifications of its structure during activation, and consequently of the exposure of its functional domains.  相似文献   

6.
In order to titrate and understand the role of arginyl residues of D-β-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase, arginyl specific reagents: butanedione, 1,2-cyclohexanedione and phenylglyoxal were incubated with three different forms of the enzyme; native enzyme (inner mitochondrial membrane bound), purified apoenzyme (phospholipid -free) and phospholipid-enzyme complex (reconstituted active form).After complete inactivation of the enzyme by [14C]-phenylglyoxal, the number of modified arginyl residues was different: one with the lipid-free apoenzyme and three with the phospholipid-enzyme complex, suggesting a conformational change of the enzyme triggered by the presence of phospholipids.After exhaustive chemical modification either of the apoenzyme or of the phospholipid-enzyme complex with [14C]-phenylglyoxal, four arginyl residues were titrated indicating that these residues are located in the hydrophilic part of the enzyme, not interacting with phospholipids.Reconstituted enzyme inactivated by butanedione could no longer bind a pseudosubstrate (succinate) which indicates that an arginyl residue is involved in the enzyme-substrate complex formation.The values of second order rate constants of D-β-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase inactivation by butanedione and 1,2-cyclohexanedione were unchanged with the three enzyme forms, suggesting that phospholipids are not involved in the substrate binding mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
D S Colvard  E M Wilson 《Biochemistry》1984,23(15):3479-3486
The partially purified 4.5S [3H]dihydrotestosterone receptor binds to nuclear matrix isolated from rat Dunning prostate tumor with properties similar to those reported for androgen receptor binding in intact nuclei [Colvard, D.S., & Wilson, E.M. (1984) Biochemistry (preceding paper in this issue)] in that it requires Zn2+ and mercaptoethanol, is saturable, and is temperature dependent and of high affinity (Ka approximately 10(13) M-1). On a milligrams of DNA equivalent basis, the extent of matrix binding of androgen receptor (700 fmol of receptor bound/mg of matrix protein) is similar to that of intact nuclei, corresponding to approximately 1400 sites/nucleus. Association rate constants (ka) for 4.5S androgen receptor binding to matrix at 0, 15, and 25 degrees C are 2.7 X 10(5), 1.2 X 10(6), and 2.4 X 10(6) M-1 min-1, respectively, indicating an energy of activation of 15 kcal/mol. Up to 50% of matrix-bound receptor is extractable in buffer containing 3 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid plus either 0.4 M KCl or 5 mM pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. A protein fraction designated 8S androgen receptor promoting factor that promotes conversion of the 4.5S androgen receptor to 8 S [Colvard, D. S., & Wilson, E. M. (1981) Endocrinology (Baltimore) 109, 496-504] has been further purified and found to inhibit the binding of the 4.5S androgen receptor to isolated nuclei and nuclear matrix in a concentration-dependent manner. The results support the hypothesis that the 8S steroid receptor is a complex of the activated 4.5S androgen receptor with a non-steroid binding protein that renders the receptor incapable of binding in nuclei.  相似文献   

8.
The glucocorticoid receptor is present in the cytosol of cell extracts as a large nonactivated (i.e. non-DNA-binding) approximately 9 S (Mr 300,000) complex. Experimental evidence indicates that the purified nonactivated glucocorticoid receptor contains a single steroid-binding protein and two approximately 90-kDa nonsteroid-binding subunits identified as heat shock protein (hsp) 90. Translation of the glucocorticoid receptor mRNA in vitro in reticulocyte lysates produces a large nonactivated glucocorticoid receptor complex similar to that found in cytosols. The cell-free synthesized glucocorticoid receptor is able to bind steroid and can be activated further to the DNA-binding form. To test the hypothesis of an active role played by hsp90 in the stabilization of a competent steroid-binding conformation of the glucocorticoid receptor, we have synthesized the receptor in a reticulocyte lysate that has been depleted of hsp90 by immunoadsorption with AC88 anti-hsp90. Although the translation capacity of the reticulocyte system was reduced considerably upon hsp90 removal, the glucocorticoid receptor was synthesized, and a significant number of molecules were found to bind [3H]triamcinolone acetonide. Chromatography on DEAE-cellulose showed that most of the receptor molecules synthesized in hsp90-depleted lysate had lost the capacity to form an oligomeric receptor complex. Addition of purified rat liver hsp90 to the hsp90-depleted lysate before translation did not increase steroid binding nor did it restore formation of the heteromeric receptor complex. Analysis of [35S] methionine-labeled glucocorticoid receptor molecules synthesized in the hsp90-depleted lysate showed the production of polypeptides differing from the expected chromatographic pattern on DEAE-cellulose. Upon addition of purified hsp90 to the hsp90-depleted lysate, before translation, the 35S-labeled synthesized receptor fractionated on DEAE-cellulose as an intermediate peak between activated and nonactivated receptor forms. The data suggest that hsp90 alone may not be sufficient for the formation of the nonactivated steroid receptor complex.  相似文献   

9.
Chicken oviduct progesterone receptor in cytosol was found to be transformed from the 8S to 4S form by incubation at 25 degrees C as well as by 0.3 M KCl in the absence of hormone. Heat transformation of ligand-free receptor took place at a much slower rate than that of ligand-bound receptor. The eventual percentage of transformation, however, was almost the same. The 4S form of the receptor transformed by KCl in the absence of hormone could bind to DNA-cellulose, but not to nuclei. However, upon exposure it acquired the ability to bind to nuclei. It was shown that the transformed ligand-free receptor could bind to progesterone to form the normal activated steroid-receptor complex. Conversely, when activated 4S progesterone-receptor complex was treated with DCC to peel off the hormone, a resulting ligand-free receptor was formed which behaved just like the KCl-transformed receptor in the absence of hormone.  相似文献   

10.
This study shows that cytosolic androgen receptor of rat ventral prostate sediments at 10-11 S on conventional low salt sucrose density gradients (SDG), and at 4.6 S on high salt SDG, whether it is activated or not; inclusion of 10 mM Na2MoO4 in all buffers does not alter these sedimentation coefficients. In the presence of 50 mM Na2MoO4 non-activated and activated androgen receptors sediment in high salt SDG at 7-8 S and 4.6 S, respectively. Thus the presence of high concentrations of molybdate during centrifugation inhibits the KCl induced disaggregation of receptor into subunits. Similar effects are observed on Sephacryl-S200 gel filtration; in 50 mM MoO2-4 and 0.4 M KCl non-activated receptor has an estimated Stokes radius of 67 A; this value decreases to 52 A upon activation in the presence of proteolysis inhibitors; omission of molybdate during chromatography yielded 52 A and 27 A entities. Estimated mol. wts are 198,000 Daltons for the non-activated 67 A form and 98,000 Daltons for the activated 52 A receptor. Sodium molybdate (50 mM) prevents temperature (18 degrees C) and high ionic strength (0.4 M KCl) induced receptor activation. This inhibition was overcome by removing molybdate by centrifugal gel filtration, or by increasing the KCl concentration to 0.8 M. The inhibitory effects of molybdate on salt induced receptor disaggregation into activated subunits are no longer observed at pH greater than 7.4 or after chemical modification of sulfhydryl groups. Once androgen receptor has been disaggregated into its activated subunits the activated state is maintained even upon reassociation to 10-11 S aggregates in low salt. The relative concentrations of KCl and molybdate are critical; thus, 10 mM Na2MoO4/0.4 M KCl and 50 mM Na2MoO4/0.8-1.2 M KCl did not differentiate activated from non-activated androgen receptor based on their hydrodynamic properties. In the presence of 0.4 M KCl and 50 mM molybdate, however, the hydrodynamic properties of androgen receptor can be correlated with receptor activation.  相似文献   

11.
Hydroxylation of estrogens at C(2) or C(4) effects differentially their binding affinity to and dissociation rate from the estrogen receptor. The X-ray crystal structure of 4-hydroxyestradiol (4-OH-E2) is reported here and compared with that of 2-hydroxyestradiol (2-OH-E2), the 2- and 4-hydroxylated derivatives of estrone (E1) and with that of the parent estrogens, E1 and E2. The overall molecular shape and hydrogen bonding patterns of each were examined for their possible relevance to their binding to the estrogen receptor and their biological activity. A shift in the B-ring conformation away from the symmetrical 7 alpha,8 beta-half-chair form toward the 8 beta-sofa form is induced by both 2- and 4-hydroxy substitution. This shift appears to be larger in the case of E2 than E1 derivatives and to be correlated with an observed change in the hydrogen bonding potential of the C(3) hydroxyl. In 4-OH-E2, as in E2 and 4-OH-E1, the C(3) hydroxyl functions both as a hydrogen bond donor and acceptor. In contrast in 2-OH-E2 the hydroxyl functions only as a donor. The markedly reduced affinity of 2-hydroxylated estrogens for the estrogen receptor could be due to a combination of steric interactions, competition between O(2) and O(3) for hydrogen bonds for a common site on the receptor, and to general interference with hydrogen bond formation of O(3). The C(4) hydroxyl participates in the formation of a chain of hydrogen bonds in the solid state that is similar to a chain seen in single crystals of E2. The presence of a similar chain of hydrogen bonds involving O(3) in the receptor site could account for the decreased dissociation rate of the 4-OH-E2 receptor complex.  相似文献   

12.
Purified "B" protein (MW approximately 110 kDa) that binds progesterone, and more than 90% of the activated receptor labelled with tritiated hormone in the oviduct cytosol of chicks pretreated with estrogen have the same chromatography behavior on DNA-cellulose. Conversely, neither the nonactivated "8S" receptor, that includes the heat-shock protein hsp90, nor the later bind to DNA. With other biochemical and immunological arguments, these results indicate that the hormone binding B unit of the progesterone receptor binds DNA as do all steroid hormone receptors.  相似文献   

13.
Treatment of rat liver cytosol containing temperature-transformed, [3H]dexamethasone-bound receptors at 0 degree C with the sulfhydryl-modifying reagent methyl methanethiosulfonate (MMTS) inhibits the DNA-binding activity of the receptor, and DNA-binding activity is restored after addition of dithiothreitol (DTT). When cytosol containing untransformed receptors is heated at 25 degrees C in the presence of MMTS, the 90-kDa heat shock protein dissociates from the receptor in the same manner as in the absence of MMTS, and the receptor will bind to DNA-cellulose if DTT is added subsequently at 0 degree C. These observations are consistent with the conclusion of Bodwell et al. (Bodwell, J. E., Holbrook. N. J. and Munck, A. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 1392-1398) that sulfhydryl moieties on the receptor are absolutely required for the receptor to bind to DNA, and they show that the sulfhydryl-modifying reagent does not inhibit the temperature-mediated dissociation of the heteromeric receptor complex that accompanies transformation to the DNA-binding state. When steroid-receptor complexes that are prebound to DNA-cellulose are exposed to MMTS, the steroid rapidly dissociates, but the receptor remains bound to DNA. Thus, the presence of steroid is not required for the receptor to remain bound to DNA in a high affinity manner. Treatment of cytosol containing transformed glucocorticoid-receptor complexes at 0 degrees C with 20 mM hydrogen peroxide also inactivates the DNA-binding activity of the receptor. The peroxide-induced inactivation is reversed by DTT. Incubation of rat liver cytosol containing untransformed glucocorticoid-receptor complexes at 25 degrees C with hydrogen peroxide prevents their transformation to the DNA-binding form as shown by their inability to bind to DNA-cellulose after addition of DTT. The presence of peroxide during heating of the cytosol also prevents dissociation of the receptor complex as assayed both by reduction in sedimentation value of the receptor and by dissociation of the 90-kDa heat shock protein from the steroid-binding protein. These results strongly suggest that critical sulfur moieties in the receptor complex must be in a reduced form for the temperature-mediated dissociation of the receptor to occur.  相似文献   

14.
The large subunit (L) of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) from Synechococcus PCC 6301 was expressed in Escherichia coli, purified as the octamer L8, and analyzed for its ability to tightly bind the transition state analog, 2-carboxyarabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate (CABP). [14C]CABP remained tightly bound to L8 after challenging with [12C]CABP and gel filtration, indicating that L8 alone without the small subunit (S) could tightly bind CABP. Binding of CABP to L8 induced a shift in the gel filtration profile due to apparent aggregation of L8. Aggregation did not occur with the L8S8-CABP complex nor with L8-CABP in the presence of 150 mM MgCl2. If ionic strength was increased with either KCl or MgCl2 during or after the binding of [14C]CABP to L8, [14C]CABP in the complex exchanged with [12C]CABP and was lost from the protein. Ionic strength strongly affected the rate constant (k4) for [14C]CABP dissociation from the L8-[14C]CABP complex, but had little effect on k4 for the L8S8-CABP complex. The differences in CABP binding characteristics between the L8-CABP and L8S8-CABP complexes demonstrate that S is intimately involved in maintaining the stability of the tight binding of CABP to the active site. These are the same interactions stabilizing the intermediate, 3-keto-2-carboxyarabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate, to native rubisco during CO2 fixation.  相似文献   

15.
Intact and pure nuclei were isolated by zonal centrifugation from calf uteri preincubated with [3H] estradiol at 37°C. Alternatively, labelling of nuclei was performed by cell-free incubation of filtrate homogenates with radio-active homone at 25°C. The kinetics of dissociation of the estradiol—receptor complex was studied by the tritiated estradiol—non-radioactiv estradiol-exchange method at 22°C using: (a) intact nuclei and isolated chromatin, (b) a 0.5M KCl nuclear extract (5 S) and different cytosolic preparations (4 S, 8 S or heavy aggregates), or (c) cytosolic extracts bound to an inert support like hydroxylapatite or precipitated by nuclear basic proteins. In the three groups the dissociation follows the well established two-stage first-order kinetics patterns, but whereas in Group a the operational half-life of the complex was 5 h, all the preparations of Group b, including the nuclear extract, yielded a half-life of only 10 min. Intermediate values were obtained for the preparations of Group c. Its concluded that the binding to the chromatin endows the estradiol— receptor complex with a higher stability. This might account for the characteristic retention of estradiol in uterine cells in in vivo conditions.  相似文献   

16.
After dissociation of cytosolic heteromeric glucocorticoid receptor complexes by steroid, salt, and other methods, only 35-60% of the dissociated receptors can bind to DNA-cellulose. The DNA-binding and non-DNA-binding forms of the dissociated receptors have the same Mr and are phosphorylated to the same extent (Tienrungroj, W., Sanchez, E. R., Housley, P. R., Harrison, R. W., and Pratt, W. B. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 17347-17349). The basis for the different DNA-binding activities is unknown, but the DNA-binding fraction of the receptor has a more basic pI than the non-DNA-binding fraction (Smith, A. C., Elsasser, M. S., and Harmon, J. M. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 13285-13292). We have separated the non-DNA-binding state of the receptor from the DNA-binding state and then cleaved it with trypsin and chymotrypsin. We find that the 15-kDa tryptic fragment derived from the non-DNA-binding state of the dissociated receptor is fully competent in binding DNA, whereas the 42-kDa chymotryptic fragment containing both the hormone-binding and DNA-binding domains does not bind DNA. Trypsin cleavage of the molybdate-stabilized untransformed receptor also yields a 15-kDa fragment that is fully competent in binding DNA. Reducing agents do not restore DNA-binding to the non-DNA-binding fraction of the receptor and the hormone-binding domain can be separated from the DNA-binding domain on nonreducing gel electrophoresis. These results argue that the two domains are not linked by disulfide bridges, and they are consistent with the proposal that there are two least energy states of folding after dissociation of hsp90. A significant portion of the receptors is "misfolded" in such a manner that the steroid binding domain is directly preventing DNA-binding activity.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The retention pattern and biochemical characteristics of estrogen receptors in the nuclei of uterine cells were studied as a function of time after the in vivo injection of estradiol (E2) to immature female rats. One hour after the injection of 0.1 mug of tritiated E2, approximately 0.20 pmol per uterus of receptor bound hormone is retained in uterine nuclei. This dose of E2 produces a maximal uterotrophic response. Six hours after E2 administration, uterine nuclei retain 0.04-0.08 pmol of hormone per uterus. Hormone receptor complexes extracted from uterine nuclei 1, 3, and 6 h after in vivo injection of hormone have similar structural and binding characteristics. Receptors extracted at all three times sediment at 5S in high salt gradients and have a dissociation binding constant of approximately 3 nM for E2. The wash-out curves of receptors as a function of salt concentration are identical for uterine nuclei from animals treated for 1 or 6 h with estradiol, suggesting that the nature of the nuclear binding of receptors is not altered during this time interval. Experiments utilizing the injection of unlabeled estradiol, followed by an in vitro exchange procedure with tritiated estradiol, indicated that the total nuclear estrogen receptor sites, i.e., filled and vacant, decreased similarly.  相似文献   

19.
The glucocorticoid receptor exists in the cytoplasm of hormone-untreated cells as a complex with the 90-kDa heat shock protein (HSP90). Glucocorticoids induce dissociation of the glucocorticoid binding protein from HSP90 and translocation of the receptor to the nucleus. HSP90 binds to actin filaments, and calmodulin or tropomyosin inhibits the binding. We present here evidence that the HSP90-containing glucocorticoid receptor complexes (8 S receptor) bind to filamentous actin in vitro while the HSP90-free form of the receptor does not. The binding was detectable for both the crude cytosolic fractions and the partially purified 8 S glucocorticoid receptor. Purified HSP90 or tropomyosin completely abolished the binding. Calmodulin also inhibited the binding in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. From these results, we conclude that the glucocorticoid receptor complex is able to bind actin filaments via the HSP90 moiety. The binding may provide an anchoring mechanism for the glucocorticoid receptor in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

20.
Binding activity characteristics in human endometrium of estradiol-17-beta (E2), estrone (E1), estriol (E3), and 17-alpha-ethinylestradiol-17-beta (EE2) were determined in cytosol extracts. Unequal binding was observed. A lower affinity of E3 binding in endometrial cytosol when compared to E2 was parallel to a slower rate of association and to a higher rate of dissociation. For EE2, the slightly higher affinity was parallel to a higher rate of association and a slower dissociation rate. For E1, the association rate constant was 1/2 of that for E2 when the total number of binding sites able to bind E2 was considered in the calculation. Association rate constant was only 23% of that for E2 when the total number of binding sites able to bind E1 was considered in the calculation, and the dissociation rate was neglected. The dissociation rate of E1 receptor complexes was 20 times higher at both 0 and 25 degrees centigrade than the E2 receptor complexes. An unequal number of binding sites was measured for E2 and E1, an unexpected finding. Also observed was an unequal binding for E2 and E1 which varied during the menstrual cycle, and it is suggested that progesterone may be the regulatory factor since E1 and E2 receptors increased during the luteal phase.  相似文献   

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