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1.
Steroids must traverse the nuclear envelope before exerting their action at the chromatin. However, few studies have been done to elucidate the mechanism by which steroids traverse this membrane barrier. As first steps towards investigating the mechanism, we have characterized the binding sites for dexamethasone on male rat liver nuclear envelopes. The nuclear envelopes, prepared in the presence of dithiothreitol, were isolated from purified nuclei after treatment with DNase 1 at high pH. Binding of dexamethasone to the nuclear envelopes was measured after 16 h of incubation at 0-4 degrees C. At pH 7.4, only a single high capacity, low affinity binding site for dexamethasone was identified. However, at pH 8.6, two sites were identified; a low capacity, high affinity site and a high capacity, low affinity site. Adrenalectomy of the animal before preparation of the membranes caused loss of the high affinity site and reduction in the number of the lower affinity sites. Acute dexamethasone treatment of adrenalectomized rats resulted in the reappearance of the high affinity site but long term treatment with dexamethasone was required for complete restoration of the high affinity sites and reappearance of any of the low affinity sites. The steroid specificity of these nuclear envelope binding sites was different from that of the cytosolic glucocorticoid receptor, generally showing broader specificity. However, triamcinolone acetonide, which is a potent competitor for binding to the glucocorticoid receptor, did not complete effectively. The binding sites were sensitive to protease treatment and salt extraction studies revealed that the dexamethasone binding sites do not represent proteins non-specifically bound to the nuclear envelope. The affinity and the hormone responsiveness of the high affinity site are similar to those of the nuclear glucocorticoid receptor. Therefore, the nuclear envelope may be a site of action of glucocorticoids.  相似文献   

2.
The binding characteristics of partially purified glucocorticoid receptor complexes from hormone sensitive, non-differentiating BCL1 cells to sequentially deproteinized BCL1 chromatin-cellulose was investigated. [3H]Triamcinolone acetonide (TA)-receptor complexes were purified (approx. 30-fold) from DEAE-cellulose columns by salt elution which allowed receptor activation only in the absence of molybdate. Addition of 10 mM molybdate completely blocked salt activation. The binding pattern of the activated [3H]TA-receptor complexes to chromatin-cellulose extracted with 0-8 M guanidine hydrochloride revealed three regions of increased binding activity (acceptor sites), at 2, 5 and 7 M guanidine hydrochloride. Acceptor site binding was markedly reduced for chromatin extracted with 3, 6 and 8 M guanidine hydrochloride. Non-activated receptor complexes demonstrated very low binding to deproteinized chromatin. It was also shown that chromatin binding required glucocorticoid receptors and that free ligand or ligand bound to other proteins did not bind significantly to chromatin. In addition, binding of [3H]TA-receptor complexes to partially deproteinized chromatin was competable by unlabeled TA-receptor complexes. Scatchard analysis demonstrated that chromatin from non-differentiating BCL1 cells possesses multiple, high-affinity binding sites which differ in their affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor. Partially deproteinized chromatin from lipopolysaccharide-stimulated BCL1 cells demonstrated a different pattern of receptor binding, i.e., receptor binding was significantly greater to chromatin previously extracted with 6-8 M guanidine hydrochloride. These results suggest that differentiation alters the state of chromatin and the interaction of non-histone protein/DNA acceptor sites with glucocorticoid receptors. These alterations may play a role in the acquisition of hormone resistance.  相似文献   

3.
In the absence of salt the cytoplasmic glucocorticoid receptor of fetal rabbit lung sediments at 7 S while the nuclear receptor sediments at 4 S. However, if nuclear extracts are mixed with receptor-depleted cytosol preparations in dilute buffer solutions without added salt, the nuclear 4 S receptor sediments as a 7 S species similar to that observed for the cytoplasmic form under the same conditions suggesting an interaction of the nuclear receptor with other cytosol proteins rather than with itself. In addition, both cytoplasmic and nuclear receptors sediment at 4 S in 0.4 M KCl and a major fraction of the nuclear receptor has an agarose elution profile identical to that of the cytoplasmic receptor. Thus a major fraction of the nuclear receptors is indistinguishable from the cytoplasmic receptors by the methods used. Since the cytoplasmic receptor sediments at 4 S in 0.15 M KCl, it is suggested that in vivo the glucocorticoid receptor may exist as a 4 S species and that the 7 S form described previously may result from an interaction of the 4 S component with other cytosol proteins in hypotonic media. About 25% of the receptor present in nuclear extracts has an agarose elution profile different from that of the cytoplasmic receptor in 0.4 M KCl. This suggests that either the nuclear receptor associates with itself or other nuclear proteins or that more than one form of nuclear receptor exists. Earlier observations suggested that in the absence of hormone the glucocorticoid receptor is localized exclusively in the cytoplasm of lung cells and that the nuclear receptor is formed by a transfer of the cytoplasmic steroid-receptor complex into the nucleus. A prerequisite for this transfer seems to be a modification of the receptor to an active form which can bind to nuclei. This receptor transfomration, referred to in this paper as activation of the receptor, can occur in the absence of nuclei and is highly dependent on temperature and ionic strength. Cytoplasmic receptors activated either by heating or by exposure to high ionic strength are indistinguishable from nonactivated receptors by sucrose density gradient analysis or by agarose gel filtration in solutions containing 0.4 M KCl. Simiarly, no significant difference in the absence of salt is observed after activation by heating. These results suggest that activation of the cytoplasmic glucocorticoid receptor involves conformational changes which favor its transfer and/or binding to nuclear sites rather than conversion of a 4 S species to a faster-sedimenting form by dimerization or by addition of another protein unit as has been proposed for the activation of the estrogen receptor of the rat uterus.  相似文献   

4.
Incubation of demembranated sperm chromatin in cytoplasmic extracts of unfertilized Xenopus laevis eggs resulted in nuclear envelope assembly, chromosome decondensation, and sperm pronuclear formation. In contrast, egg extracts made with EGTA-containing buffers induced the sperm chromatin to form chromosomes or irregularly shaped clumps of chromatin that were incorporated into bipolar or multipolar spindles. The 150,000 g supernatants of the EGTA extracts could not alone support these changes in incubated nuclei. However, these supernatants induced not only chromosome condensation and spindle formation, but also nuclear envelope breakdown when added to sperm pronuclei or isolated Xenopus liver or brain nuclei that were incubated in extracts made without EGTA. Similar changes were induced by partially purified preparations of maturation-promoting factor. The addition of calcium chloride to extracts containing condensed chromosomes and spindles caused dissolution of the spindles, decondensation of the chromosomes, and re-formation of interphase nuclei. These results indicate that nuclear envelope breakdown, chromosome condensation, and spindle assembly, as well as the regulation of these processes by Ca2+-sensitive cytoplasmic components, can be studied in vitro using extracts of amphibian eggs.  相似文献   

5.
Morphological studies have established that peripheral heterochromatin is closely associated with the nuclear envelope. The tight coupling of the two structures has been attributed to nuclear lamins and lamin-associated proteins; however, it remains to be determined which of these elements are essential and which play an auxiliary role in nuclear envelope-chromatin interactions. To address this question, we have used as a model system in vitro reconstituted vesicles assembled from octyl glucoside-solubilized nuclear envelopes. Comparing the chromosome binding properties of normal, immunodepleted and chemically extracted vesicles, we have arrived at the conclusion that the principal chromatin anchorage site at the nuclear envelope is the lamin B receptor (LBR), a ubiquitous integral protein of the inner nuclear membrane. Consistent with this interpretation, purified LBR binds directly to chromatin fragments and decorates the surface of chromosomes in a distinctive banding pattern.  相似文献   

6.
The binding characteristics of partially purified glucocorticoid receptor complexes from hormone sensitive, non-differentiating BCL1 cells to sequentially deproteinized BCL1 chromatin-cellulose was investigated. [3H]Triamcinolone acetonide (TA)-receptor complexes were purified (approx. 30-fold) from DEAF-cellulose columns by salt elution which allowed receptor activation only in the absence of molybdate. Addition of 10 mM molybdate completely blocked salt activation. The binding pattern of the activated [3H]TA-receptor complexes to chromatin-cellulose extracted with 0–8 M guanidine hydrochloride revealed three regions of increased binding activity (acceptor sites), at 2, 5 and 7 M guanidine hydrochloride. Acceptor site binding was markedly reduced for chromatin extracted with 3, 6 and 8 M guanidine hydrochloride. Non-activated receptor complexes demonstrated very low binding to deproteinized chromatin. It was also shown that chromatin binding required glucocortical receptors and that free ligand or ligand bound to other proteins did not bind significantly to chromatin. In addition, binding of [3H]TA-receptor complexes to partially deproteinized chromatin was competable by unlabeled TA-receptor complexes. Scatchard analysis demonstrated that chromatin from non-differentiating BCL1 cells possesses multiple, high-affinity binding sites which differ in their affinity for the glucocorticoid receptor. Partially deproteinized chromatin from lipopolysaccharide-stimulated BCL1 cells demonstrated a different pattern of receptor binding, i.e., receptor binding was significantly greater to chromatin previously extracted with 6–8 M guanidine hydrochloride. These results suggest that differentiation alters the state of chromatin and the interaction of non-histone protein/DNA acceptor sites with glucocorticoid receptors. These alterations may play a role in the acquisition of hormone resistance.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The molecular mechanisms underlying the nuclear entry of steroid receptors and possible regulation of steroid hormone action during receptor passage across the nuclear envelope have not been elucidated. A nuclear localization signal has been identified in the hinge region of the glucocorticoid receptor. A synthetic peptide corresponding to this sequence was radio-iodinated and incubated with high salt- and detergent-extracted rat liver nuclei or nuclear envelope in the presence of crosslinker. After SDS-PAGE, two nuclear polypeptides of 60 and 76 kDa which had been specifically crosslinked were identified by autoradiography. A 60 kDa polypeptide was also crosslinked in the nuclear envelope fraction. ATP and elevated temperatures enhanced the crosslinking of both nuclear peptides. Finally, we showed that the pattern of crosslinking of the simian virus 40 large tumour antigen nuclear localization signal was identical to that of the glucocorticoid receptor signal to the nuclear polypeptides. The crosslinked peptides are good candidates for nuclear importers of the glucocorticoid receptor. In addition, the data suggest that these binding sites may be part of a general mechanism for nuclear entry of proteins.  相似文献   

9.
《The Journal of cell biology》1984,98(4):1222-1230
A cell-free cytoplasmic preparation from activated Rana pipiens eggs could induce in demembranated Xenopus laevis sperm nuclei morphological changes similar to those seen during pronuclear formation in intact eggs. The condensed sperm chromatin underwent an initial rapid, but limited, dispersion. A nuclear envelope formed around the dispersed chromatin and the nuclei enlarged. The subcellular distribution of the components required for these changes was examined by separating the preparations into soluble (cytosol) and particulate fractions by centrifugation at 150,000 g for 2 h. Sperm chromatin was incubated with the cytosol or with the particulate material after it had been resuspended in either the cytosol, heat-treated (60 or 100 degrees C) cytosol or buffer. We found that the limited dispersion of chromatin occurred in each of these ooplasmic fractions, but not in the buffer alone. Nuclear envelope assembly required the presence of both untreated cytosol and particulate material. Ultrastructural examination of the sperm chromatin during incubation in the preparations showed that membrane vesicles of approximately 200 nm in diameter, found in the particulate fraction, flattened and fused together to contribute the membranous components of the nuclear envelope. The enlargement of the sperm nuclei occurred only after the nuclear envelope formed. The pronuclei formed in the cell-free preparations were able to incorporate [3H]dTTP into DNA. This incorporation was inhibited by aphidicolin, suggesting that the DNA synthesis by the pronuclei was dependent on DNA polymerase-alpha. When sperm chromatin was incubated greater than 3 h, the chromatin of the pronuclei often recondensed to form structures resembling mitotic chromosomes within the nuclear envelope. Therefore, it appeared that these ooplasmic preparations could induce, in vitro, nuclear changes resembling those seen during the first cell cycle in the zygote.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Monoclonal antibodies to the rat hepatic glucocorticoid receptor (GR) were produced by using 4000-fold-purified unactivated rat hepatic GR as the immunogen in an immunization in vitro. Hybridomas were screened for anti-GR antibody production by using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The antibody, 3A6, described here, is an IgM (lambda). The interaction of 3A6 with the purified GR was explored by sedimentation analysis, where a shift of the 9 S GR to a form with a higher s20,w value was demonstrated. Binding specificity and sensitivity were demonstrated by protein immunoblotting. 3A6 cross-reacted with all rat tissue glucocorticoid receptors (GRs) examined, except those of the brain. Species cross-reactivity was observed with other mammalian GRs (from human CEM-C7 cells and from pig and mouse liver). Immunocytochemical localization of the GR was assessed by indirect immunofluorescence in intact fixed cells, which demonstrated intense cytoplasmic staining in the absence of pretreatment with glucocorticoids and nuclear localization when cells were pretreated with glucocorticoids. This monoclonal antibody significantly inhibited steroid binding to unoccupied receptor and DNA binding of activated steroid-receptor complexes. Furthermore, preincubation of the purified activated GR complex with 3A6 prevented phosphorylation of the GR in vitro. Thus 3A6 differs from previous monoclonal antibodies to the GR in its capacity to cross-react with the human GR and by its specificity for an epitope on or near a functional domain of the GR.  相似文献   

12.
Unliganded glucocorticoid receptors (GRs) released from chromatin after hormone withdrawal remain associated with the nucleus within a novel subnuclear compartment that serves as a nuclear export staging area. We set out to examine whether unliganded nuclear receptors cycle between distinct subnuclear compartments or require cytoplasmic transit to regain hormone and chromatin-binding capacity. Hormone-withdrawn rat GrH2 hepatoma cells were permeabilized with digitonin to deplete cytoplasmic factors, and then hormone-binding and chromatin-binding properties of the recycled nuclear GRs were measured. We found that recycled nuclear GRs do not require cytosolic factors or ATP to rebind hormone. Nuclear GRs that rebind hormone in permeabilized cells target to high-affinity chromatin-binding sites at 30 C, but not 0 C, in the presence of ATP. Since geldanamycin, a heat shock protein-90 (hsp90)-binding drug, inhibits hormone binding to recycled nuclear GRs, hsp90 may be required to reassemble the receptor into a form capable of productive interactions with hormone. Geldanamycin also inhibits GR release from chromatin during hormone withdrawal, suggesting that hsp90 chaperone function may play multiple roles to facilitate chromatin recycling of GR.  相似文献   

13.
A new method was developed to synthesize a cortexolone-substituted affinity matrix, based on the fast, mild and quantitative reaction between alpha-ketomesylates and thiols. The resulting cortexolone-Sepharose absorbed easily the cytosolic chick thymus glucocorticoid receptor. Owing to the relatively fast dissociation of the glucocorticoid receptor-cortexolone complex, glucocorticoid receptor could be eluted with cortexolone as well as with triamcinolone acetonide from the affinity gel with similarly good yields. We obtained 75-150-fold purification factors (yield: 20-30%) using this column procedure. The partially purified glucocorticoid receptor was obtained in non-activated form. It had a Stokes radius of 6.2 +/- 0.1 nm. It could be activated to DNA-cellulose binding form by heat or 0.3 M KCl. KCl treatment activated 30-50% of the partially purified glucocorticoid receptor. Heat activation, however, was rather poor. Cortexolone-complexed, partially purified glucocorticoid receptor dissociated easily, and partially purified free glucocorticoid receptor, capable of steroid binding, could be obtained. Binding properties of the partially purified glucocorticoid receptor were then analyzed using different steroids. Dissociation rate constants were similar to those of the cytosolic glucocorticoid complexes. Association rate constants were consistently smaller than in the case of cytosolic glucocorticoid receptor, but the relative order of rates for different steroids was basically the same for glucocorticoid receptor in the two studied systems.  相似文献   

14.
We studied the glucocorticoid response to the synthetic steroid pregna-1,4-diene-11beta-ol-3,20-dione (DeltaHOP) in several cell types and correlated its biological effect with the ability of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) to be retained in the nuclear compartment. We observed that the DeltaHOP-transformed GR was diffusely distributed in the nucleus compared to the discrete structures observed for the dexamethasone (DEX)-transformed GR. Despite the fact that the receptor was entirely nuclear upon binding of each steroid and exhibited identical nuclear export rates, a greater amount of DeltaHOP-transformed GR was recovered in the cytoplasmic fraction after hypotonic cell lysis. Furthermore, accelerated nuclear export of GR was evidenced in digitonin-permeabilized cells treated with ATP and molybdate. Inasmuch as limited trypsinization of DEX-GR and DeltaHOP-GR complexes yielded different proteolytic products, we conclude that GR undergoes a differential conformational change upon binding of each ligand. We propose that these conformational differences may consequently lead to changes of stability in the interaction of the GR with chromatin. Therefore, the dynamic exchange of liganded GR with chromatin is likely to have significant consequences for the observed pleiotropic physiological responses triggered by glucocorticoid ligands, not only in different tissues but also in the same cell type.  相似文献   

15.
We demonstrate that complete sea urchin male pronuclear development in vitro is a two-step process involving membrane-independent chromatin decondensation and nuclear envelope-dependent pronuclear swelling. In the absence of cytoplasmic membrane vesicles (MVs), permeabilized sperm chromatin decondenses into a spherical nucleus of ≈4 μm in diameter. Pronuclear swelling to ≈7 μm requires an intact nuclear envelope, and the degree of swelling is limited by the amount of MVs assembled on the chromatin. Furthermore, after a nuclear envelope is formed, swelling can occur in the absence of additional cytoplasmic MVs. Nuclear swelling also requires ATP hydrolysis, Ca2+ and cytosolic factors, some of which are sensitive to heat and to the sulfhy-dryl alkylating agent, N-ethylmaleimide. The requirement for a nuclear envelope and the rate of pronuclear swelling are consistent with previous in vivo observations. © 1995 wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
After exposure of fetal rabbit lungs to glucocorticoid in vivo or in vitro, the hormone binds to specific receptors localized in the cytoplasm and in the nuclei. The present studies are compatible with a mechanism by which the nuclear receptor originates from the cytoplasm and arises from a hormone-, temperature-, and ionic strength-dependent transfer of the cytoplasmic receptor into the nucleus. This conclusion is reached from the following observations. Specific binding of glucocorticoid to nuclei from lungs not previously exposed to the hormone is not observed unless the cytosol is also present. In the presence of cytosol, nuclear uptake of the hormone is very slow at 0 degrees but is highly enhanced with increasing temperature. Concomitantly with the increased nuclear uptake there is an equiivalent loss of glucocortoid-receptor complex from the cytosol, indicating that the complex is transferred to the nuclei by a temperature-dependent process. Although the nuclei do not bind the cytoplasmic complex at 0 degrees, they do so provided that the cytosol is briefly heated in the presence of hormone prior to mixing with the nuclei. Thus the cytoplasmic complex must first be activated before it can bind to nuclei..  相似文献   

17.
Activation of the murine-mammary-tumour virus (MMTV) promoter by the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is associated with a chromatin structural transition in the B nucleosome region of the viral long terminal repeat (LTR). We have reconstituted this nucleoprotein transition with chromatin assembled on MMTV LTR DNA with Drosophila embryo extracts, purified GR, and HeLa nuclear extract. Chromatin remodelling in vitro is ATP-dependent and maps to a region identical with that found in vivo. We demonstrate specific, glucocorticoid response element dependent, binding of purified GR to a large, multi-nucleosome MMTV chromatin array and show that GR-dependent chromatin remodelling is a multistep process. In the absence of ATP, GR binds to multiple sites on the chromatin array and inhibits nuclease access to GR recognition sites. On the addition of ATP, GR induces remodelling resulting in a large increase in access of enzymes to their sites within the transition region. These findings are complemented by studies in living cells; using a tandem array of MMTV-Ras reporter elements and a form of GR labelled with the green fluorescent protein, we have observed direct targeting of the receptor to response elements in live mouse cells. Whereas the ligand-activated receptor is associated with the MMTV promoter for observable periods, photobleaching experiments provide direct evidence that the hormone-occupied receptor undergoes rapid exchange between chromatin and the nucleoplasmic compartment. The results both in vitro and in vivo are consistent with a dynamic model ('hit and run') in which GR first binds to chromatin after ligand activation, recruits a remodelling activity and is then lost from the template.  相似文献   

18.
Cells adapt to drastic changes in genome quantity during evolution and cell division by adjusting the nuclear size to exert genomic functions. However, the mechanism by which DNA content within the nucleus contributes to controlling the nuclear size remains unclear. Here, we experimentally evaluated the effects of DNA content by utilizing cell-free Xenopus egg extracts and imaging of in vivo embryos. Upon manipulation of DNA content while maintaining cytoplasmic effects constant, both plateau size and expansion speed of the nucleus correlated highly with DNA content. We also found that nuclear expansion dynamics was altered when chromatin interaction with the nuclear envelope or chromatin condensation was manipulated while maintaining DNA content constant. Furthermore, excess membrane accumulated on the nuclear surface when the DNA content was low. These results clearly demonstrate that nuclear expansion is determined not only by cytoplasmic membrane supply but also by the physical properties of chromatin, including DNA quantity and chromatin structure within the nucleus, rather than the coding sequences themselves. In controlling the dynamics of nuclear expansion, we propose that chromatin interaction with the nuclear envelope plays a role in transmitting chromatin repulsion forces to the nuclear membrane.  相似文献   

19.
After fertilization, the dormant sperm nucleus undergoes morphological and biochemical transformations leading to the development of a functional nucleus, the male pronucleus. We have investigated the formation of the male pronucleus in a cell-free system consisting of permeabilized sea urchin sperm nuclei incubated in fertilized sea urchin egg extract containing membrane vesicles. The first sperm nuclear alteration in vitro is the disassembly of the sperm nuclear lamina as a result of lamin phosphorylation mediated by egg protein kinase C. The conical sperm nucleus decondenses into a spherical pronucleus in an ATP-dependent manner. The new nuclear envelope (NE) forms by ATP-dependent binding of vesicles to chromatin and GTP-dependent fusion of vesicles to each other. Three cytoplasmic membrane vesicle fractions with distinct biochemical, chromatin-binding and fusion properties, are required for pronuclear envelope assembly. Binding of each fraction to chromatin requires two detergent-resistant lipophilic structures at each pole of the sperm nucleus, which are incorporated into the NE by membrane fusion. Targeting of the bulk of NE vesicles to chromatin is mediated by a lamin B receptor (LBR)-like integral membrane protein. The last step of male pronuclear formation involves nuclear swelling. Nuclear swelling is associated with import of soluble lamin B into the nucleus and growth of the nuclear envelope by fusion of additional vesicles. In the nucleus, lamin B associates with LBR, which apparently tethers the NE to the lamina. Thus male pronuclear envelope assembly in vitro involves a highly ordered series of events. These events are similar to those characterizing the remodeling of somatic and embryonic nuclei transplanted into oocytes. The relationship between sperm nuclear remodeling at fertilization and nuclear remodeling after nuclear transplantation is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The thyroid hormone receptor is a chromatin-associated protein which appears to mediate the actions of the thyroid hormones in mammalian cells. Unlike steroid hormone receptors, a cytoplasmic form of the receptor has not been identified, and the factors which govern the nuclear concentrations of the receptor are poorly understood. Using cultured GH1 cells, a rat pituitary cell line, we having previously demonstrated that thyroid hormones reduces the concentration of its receptor by a mechanism which involves the association of the ligand with the receptor binding site (Samuels, H.H., Stanley, F., and Shapiro, L.E. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 6052-6060). In this study, we demonstrate that n-butyrate and other aliphatic carboxylic acids elicit a reduction of thyroid hormone nuclear receptor levels without altering total cell protein synthetic rates. In contrast, the nuclear association and total cell level of the glucocorticoid receptor is not altered by n-butyrate. Evidence is presented that the aliphatic carboxylic acid-mediated reduction of thyroid hormone nuclear receptor levels is secondary to the inhibitory effect of these compounds on chromatin-associated deacetylases which is reflected as an increase in the acetylation of the nucleosome core histones. Isokinetic gradient centrifugation of chromatin solubilized from GH1 cell nuclei by micrococcal nuclease indicates that the receptor exists as a form associated with high molecular weight chromatin, as a 12.5 S form that sediments slightly faster than the bulk of the mononucleosomes, and as a 6.5 S form which appears to remain associated with low molecular weight chromatin components. Exclusive of the receptor associated with the high molecular weight chromatin, the 6.5 S form represents 80% and the 12.5 S form 10% of the receptor resolved in the gradient. n-Butyrate decreases both forms to the same degree suggesting that they are generated from the same "entity" of chromatin structure. Studies on the reappearance of receptor after restoration of the chromatin to the "normal" acetylated state are consistent with a model in which the affinity of chromatin for newly synthesized receptor is diminished in the "hyperacetylated" state.  相似文献   

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