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1.
The glucocorticoid receptor from mouse AtT-20 pituitary tumor cells exists in three forms. The largest form is an untransformed (non-DNA-binding), oligomeric species (9.1 S, 8.3 nm, Mr 319 000). Two transformed (DNA-binding) forms can be generated. One is an oligomeric protein (5.2 S, 6-8.3 nm, Mr 132 000-182 000), while the other is the monomeric, hormone-binding subunit (3.8 S, 6 nm, Mr 96 000). The composition of the oligomeric, transformed receptor and its relationship to the monomeric protein were examined. The 3.8S monomer can be isolated from DEAE-cellulose (0.12 M step elution) in a form that continues to sediment at about 3.8 S on molybdate-containing sucrose gradients and at about 4.2 S on molybdate-free gradients. Addition of a non-hormone-binding component isolated from the same DEAE-cellulose column (0.5 M KCl step) can apparently interact with the 3.8-4.2 S monomer, increasing its sedimentation coefficient to 5.2 S (on molybdate-containing gradients) or 6.6 S (on low-salt, molybdate-free gradients). This factor is a macromolecule (nondialyzable) and is heat-stable (100 degrees C, 20 min). A dose-dependent shift to the higher sedimentation coefficient is observed when increasing quantities of the 0.5 M step material are added to the receptor monomer. This activity is abolished when the 0.5 M step material is treated with ribonuclease A. Further, when RNA is purified from the 0.5 M step by phenol/chloroform extraction, its ability to increase the S value of the monomer is retained. Ribonuclease treatment of the untransformed, 9.1S, oligomeric complex does not cause a significant decrease in sedimentation rate, while the same treatment of the 5.2S, oligomeric, transformed receptor (obtained after Sephadex G-25 transformation) causes a decrease in sedimentation rate to about 3.8 S. The addition of bovine liver mRNA and rRNA does not cause a shift in sedimentation rate of the receptor monomer to a discrete, higher sedimenting receptor form. However, the addition of total rabbit liver tRNA or three distinct tRNA species causes a shift in sedimentation to a similar, but not identical, form as that with the 0.5 M step material. We propose that the 5.2S, oligomeric transformed glucocorticoid receptor is composed of one monomeric hormone-binding, protein subunit (Mr 96 000) and a low molecular weight RNA (Mr 36 000). This interaction may be important for the role of the receptor in regulating gene expression.  相似文献   

2.
The structure and subunit dissociation of the glucocorticoid receptor from the mouse AtT-20 pituitary tumor cell line was analyzed on sucrose gradients using a Beckman VTi 80 vertical tube rotor. This technique afforded a very rapid analysis (65 min) of the variously sedimenting forms compared to swinging-bucket rotor sucrose gradients, which take 16 h to run. Thus, it was possible to detect and study the molybdatestabilized, oligomeric, untransformed receptor (9.1 S) in the presence of 0.3 M KCl. Under similar conditions using the swinging-bucket rotor, only the monomeric, transformed species (3.8 S) was observed. That is, artifactual subunit dissociation was minimized using the vertical tube rotor, allowing the study of the receptor structure in a more native state. Further studies demonstrated that Sephadex LH-20 chromatography causes receptor transformation. Thus, dextran-charcoal adsorption is preferred for the removal of unbound hormone under certain circumstances. Finally, using vertical tube rotor sucrose gradients, it was determined that the transformation of the mouse AtT-20 glucocorticoid receptor involves a conversion of the oligomeric, 9.1 S, untransformed species to a 5.2 S, transformed moiety. This suggests that the 5.2 S, intermediate transformed species may be the physiologically relevant form of this gene regulatory protein.  相似文献   

3.
The glucocorticoid receptor (GC-R) isolated from the mouse AtT-20 pituitary tumor cell line exists in three forms. The untransformed (non-DNA-binding), 9.1S species (319K) can be converted into two transformed (DNA-binding) species. One of these (5.2 S, Mr 132K) appears to be composed of one molecule of the hormone-binding, monomeric protein (96K) plus a small RNA, while the second transformed species is the monomeric, hormone-binding subunit (3.8 S, 96K) itself. We wished to determine whether the untransformed GC-R contains RNA or if the monomer binds to RNA subsequent to subunit dissociation (which occurs during receptor transformation). Kinetic studies using both the crude and purified untransformed GC-R show that the untransformed, 9.1S GC-R dissociates into 3.8S monomeric subunits, without forming a transient 5.2S complex. The untransformed receptor was then purified with affinity chromatography, gel filtration, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. One major protein band, corresponding in size to the GC-R monomer (94K-96K), was observed on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels upon silver staining or fluorography of [3H]dexamethasone mesylate covalently labeled receptor. In vivo 32P-labeling of AtT-20 cells, followed by purification of the untransformed GC-R, yielded two major 32P-labeled components (94K-96K and 24K). Both of these bands were protease-sensitive, contained phosphoserine, and were unaffected by ribonuclease treatment. We conclude that the untransformed mouse GC-R is wholly proteinaceous and contains no RNA. Thus, RNA binding occurs subsequent to dissociation of the oligomeric, untransformed GC-R complex into monomers.  相似文献   

4.
Gel-exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) has been used to separate the untransformed from the transformed glucocorticoid receptor (GC-R) extracted from mouse AtT-20 cells. With 200 mM potassium phosphate as the eluent, an efficient separation of the forms of the GC-R is attained in 15-20 min. The untransformed cytosolic GC-R elutes from the column with a Stokes radius (Rs) of 8.2-8.6 nm, as do the molybdate-stabilized GC-R, the purified untransformed GC-R, and the cross-linked cytosolic GC-R. GC-R transformed in vitro by either ammonium sulfate precipitation, KCl treatment, or G-25 chromatography elutes with an Rs of 5.7-6 nm. Also, GC-R extracted from the nucleus with either 0.3 M KCl or 2 mM sodium tungstate, or purified by two cycles of DNA-cellulose chromatography, has an Rs of 5.5-6.3 nm. The data are identical either in the presence or in the absence of 20 mM Na2MoO4, suggesting that molybdate is not causing aggregation to produce a larger Rs value than that of the native receptor. Vertical tube rotor sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation of cytosol produces three forms of the GC-R: 9.1 S, 5.2 S, and 3.8 S. Sequential analysis of the GC-R forms by HPLC and vertical tube rotor ultracentrifugation and vice versa allows for the hydrodynamic determination of molecular weight within a very short time period (2-3 h total).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The effect of leupeptin upon the transformation of the glucocorticoid receptor was tested. When the labeled receptor was treated with heat or high salt in the presence of leupeptin, the binding to DNA-cellulose decreased in a dose-dependent manner. We observed 50% inhibition with about 40 mM leupeptin. The addition of leupeptin after the transformation procedures did not inhibit the binding to DNA-cellulose. In gradient centrifugation, 40 mM leupeptin retained approximately 10S, untransformed form. Elution profiles from DEAE-cellulose showed the preservation of the peak eluted with 0.2 M KCl, corresponding to the untransformed form. These results indicate that leupeptin might have the similar effects to molybdate in regard to blocking the transformation of rat liver glucocorticoid receptor, though the effects with leupeptin were not as great as those seen with molybdate.  相似文献   

6.
A comparison of the physicochemical properties between pyridoxal 5'-phosphate- and 0.4 M KCl-extracted nuclear glucocorticoid receptors has been made utilizing HeLa S3 cells as a source of receptor. Both pyridoxal 5'-phosphate/NaBH4-reduced and 0.4 M KCl-extracted receptors sedimented as approximately 3.5-4.5 S species in 5-20% sucrose gradients containing 0, 0.15, and 0.4 M KCl. Under low-ionic-strength buffer conditions, pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-extracted receptor elutes close to the void volume of a Sephacryl S-300 gel-exclusion column. Increasing the [KCl] of the column to 0.4 M resulted in the elution of receptor with a Stokes radius of 58 A and calculated Mr = 96,000. Nuclear receptors extracted with 0.4 M KCl also formed a large-molecular-weight complex which eluted close to the void volume of the gel-exclusion column. Increasing the [KCl] to 0.4 M had the effect of shifting this receptor form to a species which had a Stokes radius of 62 A and calculated Mr = 89,700. Ion-exchange analysis of nuclear-extracted receptors revealed that 0.4 M KCl-extracted receptors exhibited considerable charge heterogeneity, whereas pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-extracted receptors did not. Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-extracted receptors (approximately 86%) eluted from DEAE-cellulose at a [KCl] greater than 0.15 M; approximately 14% of the receptors had little affinity for DEAE-cellulose. Pyridoxal phosphate-treated receptors had little affinity for hydroxylapatite, phosphocellulose, and DNA-cellulose. The predominant form of 0.4 M KCl-extracted nuclear receptors (approximately 78%) eluted from DEAE-cellulose between 0.05 and 0.15 M KCl, a position coincident with "activated" glucocorticoid receptors. The remaining receptor fraction (approximately 22%) eluted from DEAE-cellulose at a [KCl] greater than 0.15 M, a position coincident with "unactivated" glucocorticoid receptors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The glucocorticoid hormone-receptor complex has been shown to exist in several forms. The transformation status of various forms of the complex isolated from rat thymus cytosol in the presence of molybdate was determined. The non-transformed receptor had a higher affinity for DEAE-cellulose than the transformed receptor. The rate at which the non-transformed complex was transformed to a smaller form with a low affinity for DEAE-cellulose by exposure to salt was greater in the absence of molybdate than in its presence. We conclude that salt-induced transformation of the complex is retarded but not prevented by molybdate and is associated with subunit dissociation.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract

The physico-chemical properties of glucocorticoid receptors bound with tritiated corticosterone were compared to those of the triamcinolone acetonide glucocorticoid receptor complex. The goal was to determine whether the natural agonist forms complexes similar to those generated by the synthetic agonist. Structure was probed using three techniques; diethylaminoethyl-cellulose (DEAE) chromatography, vertical tube rotor sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation (SGU) and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). These techniques are all fast enough to allow analysis of the labile corticosterone receptor complexes. Results showed that complexes generated by both classes of ligands were similar. They eluted from DEAE cellulose and HPLC columns at similar positions and sedimented similarly in sucrose gradients. This was true for both the untransformed and transformed species. It is concluded that natural and synthetic glucocorticoid agonists interact with glucocorticoid receptors to form indistinguishable complexes. Thus synthetic agonists are appropriate probes of events which take place with natural glucocorticoids.  相似文献   

9.
Incubation of molybdate-stabilized L cell cytosol with a monoclonal antibody directed against the 100-kDa glucocorticoid-binding protein causes the immune-specific adsorption to protein A-Sepharose of both the 100-kDa glucocorticoid receptor and the 90-kDa murine heat shock protein (hsp90) (Sanchez, E. R., Toft, D. O., Schlesinger, M. J., and Pratt, W. B. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 12398-12401). When the glucocorticoid receptor in cytosol is transformed to the DNA-binding state, hsp90 dissociates. In this paper, we show that temperature-mediated dissociation of hsp90 from the receptor is a hormone-dependent event in the same manner as temperature-mediated transformation to the DNA-binding state. In contrast to temperature-mediated transformation, ammonium sulfate causes both dissociation of hsp90 from the receptor and conversion of the receptor to the DNA-binding form in a manner that does not require the presence of steroid. The untransformed form of the glucocorticoid receptor and the strongly negatively charged hsp90 protein behave similarly on DEAE-cellulose chromatography, suggesting that the hsp90 component may contribute significantly to the net negative charge behavior of the non-DNA-binding form of the receptor complex.  相似文献   

10.
The contention that transformation of steroid-receptor complexes is represented by dissociation of receptor oligomers was tested by comparing sedimentation and DNA binding properties of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes from HeLa cell cytosol under several conditions. Transformation of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes could be induced by heat, and/or salt treatment of cytosolic extracts, but not by dilution. Heat-induced transformation of receptor complexes was also confirmed by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Analysis of cytosolic extracts showed that sedimentation and DNA binding properties of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes did not correlate. Both oligomeric and monomeric receptor complexes, in fact, were found to be either transformed, or untransformed, depending on the treatments cytosolic extracts underwent, before being subjected to analysis. We then concluded that release of glucocorticoid receptor monomers cannot account for their transformation to a DNA-binding form in vitro, and suggested that exposure of positive charges on the surface of receptors in the course of transformation occurs in some region of the glucocorticoid receptor which is not involved in interactions between the proteinaceous components of oligomers.  相似文献   

11.
The glucocorticoid receptor (GR) from mouse AtT-20 pituitary tumor cells, when transformed using a variety of in vitro protocols, yields a DNA-binding RNA-containing 6 S form. In order to better understand the physiological role of RNA interaction with the transformed GR, we have isolated and purified the putative RNA from AtT-20 cells. [3H]Triamcinolone acetonide-labeled cytosolic GR was transformed, using Sephadex G-25 filtration, to yield the RNA-containing 6 S GR. The transformed 6 S GR was separated on DEAE-cellulose into the 4 S GR (eluting at about 100 mM KCl) while its associated RNA eluted at 0.30-0.45 M KCl. The addition of only these RNA fractions to the 4 S GR can reconstitute 6 S GR as shown on 5-20% sucrose gradients. RNA (0.3-0.45 M KCl fractions) was further purified by hydroxylapatite chromatography, and the bound RNA (eluted at approximately 70 mM PO4(-2)) was then loaded onto preparative 5-20% sucrose gradients to separate RNA on the basis of size (sedimentation rate). A uniform class of RNA sedimenting at 4 S was obtained and then adsorbed to oligo(dT)-cellulose columns. The unbound fraction (poly(A-)) was capable of shifting 4 S GR to 6 S. Using these chromatographic procedures about 90% of the cellular RNA, incapable of reconstituting the 6 S GR from the 4 S form, was eliminated. The 4 S GR was covalently cross-linked with the purified RNA (termed PIVB RNA) using formaldehyde. The resulting cross-linked GR X RNA complexes were shown to sediment at the density of ribonucleoprotein (1.38 g/cm3) in CsCl gradients and at the 6 S position in high salt sucrose gradients. The hydrolysis of PIVB RNA with ribonuclease A prevented the formation of high salt-resistant ribonucleoprotein complexes, indicating that the GR may be in close contact with PIVB RNA. Electrophoresis of the PIVB RNA on 5% agarose-formaldehyde-denaturing gels yielded one major band with a molecular size of approximately 75 bases. It thus appears that an endogenous 4 S RNA (PIVB RNA) of about 25 kDa specifically interacts with the monomeric 4 S GR to yield the 6 S GR.  相似文献   

12.
Rat submandibular gland cytosol contained androgen receptor which had a single class of specific binding and an apparent dissociation constant of (1.1-1.2) X 10(-9) M. The process of transformation was investigated by a slightly modified minicolumn method in which the transformed receptor complexes were separated from the nontransformed receptor and meroreceptor. 10 mM ATP or pyrophosphate at 0 degrees C induced transformation of androgen receptor as did heat or salt treatment. 20 mM of sodium molybdate completely inhibited transformation that resulted from ATP, heat or salt treatment. The nontransformed androgen receptor complexes sedimented at 8 S and eluted at 250-260 mM KCl from DEAE-Sephacel, and its molecular weight was found to be 220 000 on Sephacryl S300 gel chromatography. On the other hand, the transformed androgen receptor complexes sedimented at 4.1-4.3 S (ATP or KCl treatment) or 3.5-3.8 S (heat treatment) and eluted at 60-80 mM KCl from DEAE-Sephacel. The molecular weight of the transformed androgen receptor complexes was 80 000-85 000 (ATP or KCl treatment) or 70 000-80 000 (heat treatment). These results suggest that the transformation of androgen-receptor complexes from rat submandibular gland was induced by the subunit dissociation and that salt bridges may be involved in the subunit interaction.  相似文献   

13.
Cytosol preparations contain an endogenous heat-stable factor which stabilizes the glucocorticoid receptor in its untransformed, non DNA-binding form. Elution of a partially purified preparation of this stabilizing factor through a metal chelating resin (Chelex-100) leads to the loss of its ability to inhibit temperature-mediated transformation of the receptor. Sodium molybdate mimicks the ability of this endogenous metal to stabilize the untransformed receptor, and it too is adsorbed by Chelex resin. When an L-cell cytosol preparation containing the glucocorticoid receptor is passed through a column of Chelex-100 resin and then incubated at 15 degrees C, the receptor is rapidly transformed to the DNA-binding state, regardless of whether it is steroid-bound or not. In contrast, whole cytosol containing endogenous metals is transformed to the DNA-binding state only when the receptor is both steroid-bound and exposed to elevated temperature. these data suggest that a metal (or metals) may be involved in conferring the property of ligand-dependency to the transformation process.  相似文献   

14.
The glucocorticoid receptor from rat liver cytosol prepared in 2 ml buffer/g tissue sedimented at approximately 10 S in low salt density gradient centrifugation without molybdate. When the receptor was heated at 25 degrees C, both approximately 10 S and approximately 7 S forms were seen in low salt gradient. The approximately 10 S form was not capable of binding to DNA-cellulose and was stabilized by sodium molybdate, namely it corresponded to untransformed receptor. The approximately 7 S form was capable of binding to DNA-cellulose and regarded as transformed receptor. On the other hand, partially-purified transformed receptor labeled with [3H]dexamethasone-21-mesylate sedimented at approximately 5 S, which migrated as a approximately 94 kDa species in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The reconstitution analysis of this partially-purified approximately 5 S receptor and liver cytosol, showed the shift to approximately 7 S form. RNase A or T1 converted approximately 7 S transformed form into approximately 5 S but it did not affect approximately 10 S untransformed form. 5-20 mM sodium molybdate also shifted approximately 7 S to approximately 5 S. These results indicate that the approximately 7 S transformed form of the glucocorticoid receptor observed in low salt conditions might be an oligomer, probably including both approximately 5 S steroid-binding component and RNA/ribonucleoprotein, and that molybdate dissociates these interactions in a specific manner.  相似文献   

15.
We have reported that the 7-8S form of the rat liver glucocorticoid receptor is associated with RNA. Whether the unactivated 9-10S form of the glucorticoid receptor is also associated with RNA is less clear. Here we provide evidence that the unactivated 9-10S receptor is indeed associated with RNA. Unactivated 9-10S receptor was partially purified by diethylaminoethyl (DEAE)-cellulose chromatography in the presence of molybdate, an activation inhibitor. This preparation was then bound to BuGR-2, a mouse monoclonal antibody of the immunoglobulin G (IgG)-2 class to the rat liver glucocorticoid receptor, or to nonspecific mouse IgG-2. The antibody-antigen complex was then bound to protein A sepharose and washed to remove extraneous RNA. When the receptor was dissociated from the antibody and the RNA extracted and end-labeled, a distinct band of approximately 170 nucleotide (nt) was found that was specific for the BuGR-2 purified receptor. This band could also be found in DEAE-cellulose receptor that had been isolated from sucrose gradients. The DEAE-cellulose receptor was then cross-linked with formaldehyde before mixing with BuGR-2 in order to permit more vigorous washing of the antigen-antibody complex. In addition to the 170 nt RNA band, another distinct band at approximately 400 nt was seen that was specific to the BuGR-2 derived isolate. These results provide evidence that the 9-10S form of the glucocorticoid receptor from rat liver is associated with RNA.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
The association of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes with other components in vivo has been evaluated by chemical crosslinking of hormone-treated cells. When cells were incubated with hormone at 2 degrees C, before being subjected to crosslinking, most glucocorticoid-receptor complexes were found untransformed, as judged by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, and sedimented as 11-6 S oligomers in sucrose gradients containing 0.3 M NaCl. If crosslinking was performed after cells were treated with hormone at 37 degrees C, about 60% of cytosolic glucocorticoid-receptor complexes were found transformed, and sedimented as 4 S monomers.  相似文献   

18.
This brief review explores some recent observations relating to the structure of untransformed glucocorticoid and progesterone receptors and the mechanism by which the receptors are transformed to the DNA-binding state. In their molybdatestabilized, untransformed state, progesterone and glucocorticoid receptors exist as a heteromeric 8-9S complex containing one unit of steroid binding phosphoprotein and one or two units of the 90 kD heat shock protein hsp90. When the receptors are transformed, the steroid-binding protein dissociates from hsp90. In cytosol preparations, temperature-mediated dissociation proceeds much more rapidly in the presence of hormone. The dissociated receptor binds to DNA with high affinity, regardless of whether it is in the hormone-bound or the hormone-free state. These observations raise the possibility that the primary, and perhaps the only, role for the hormone is to promote dissociation of the receptor-hsp90 complex. Molybdate, vanadate, and tungstate inhibit receptor transformation to the DNA-binding form, an effect that appears to reflect the ability of these transition metal oxyanions to stabilize the complex between the steroid receptor and hsp90. By promoting the formation of disulfide bonds, hydrogen peroxide also stabilizes the glucocorticoid receptor-hsp90 complex and prevents receptor transformation. A small, heat-stable factor present in all cytosol preparations inhibits receptor transformation, and, when the factor is removed, glucocorticoid receptors are rapidly transformed. This ubiquitous factor has the physical properties of a metal anion, and it is proposed that molybdate and vanadate affect steroid receptor complexes by interacting with a metal anion-binding site that is normally occupied by this endogenous receptor-stabilizing factor.  相似文献   

19.
Physicochemical properties of native and activated (DNA-binding) forms of the glucocorticoid receptor in cytosol prepared from lactating goat mammary tissue have been examined. Under hypotonic conditions the cytosolic receptor sediments at 8.4 S or 9.9 S in the absence or presence of 10 mM molybdate, respectively. The receptor in cytosol, either with or without molybdate elutes from DEAE-cellulose at approximately 200 mM potassium phosphate concentration. Isoelectric focusing reveals that this form of the receptor focuses at pH 5.5. Further, the cytosolic form of the receptor exhibits minimal binding affinity for polyanions such as DNA-cellulose. Its Stokes radius is 77 A and the mol. wt is approximately 331,000. Following exposure to in vitro activating conditions (including elevated ionic strength or temperature), the liganded receptor exhibits much lower affinity for DEAE-cellulose (elution at 35-55 mM potassium phosphate concentration). Other alterations in properties of the activated receptor, after partial purification, include sedimentation at 3.9 S in hypotonic sucrose gradients, binding to polyanions (DNA-cellulose), and an isoelectric point at pH 7.2. This receptor has a Stokes radius of 58 A and a mol wt of 98,000. A degraded form, with a mol. wt of approximately 57,000 and high affinity for polyanions, was the major form of the receptor obtained if appropriate precautions to prevent or remove proteolytic activity were not observed during purification and/or characterization of the activated receptor.  相似文献   

20.
The untransformed glucocorticoid receptor of rat thymus cytosol was characterized in the form of its complex with [1,2,4-3H]triamcinolone acetonide by ion-exchange chromatography and by gel filtration and sucrose-density-gradient ultracentrifugation at different ionic strengths. Molybdate (10 mM) was present throughout all experimental procedures and prevented receptor inactivation and degradation as well as transformation. At low ionic strength the molybdate-stabilized steroid-receptor complex was detected as a single highly asymmetric entity with a Stokes radius of 5.85 nm, a sedimentation coefficient of 9.6 S and an apparent molecular weight of 236 000. This form was converted into a smaller, even more asymmetric, form in increasing proportion as the ionic strength was increased. In the presence of 0.4 M-KCl, the smaller form had a Stokes radius of 4.95 nm, a sedimentation coefficient of 4.6 S and an apparent molecular weight of 95 500. It is concluded that the glucocorticoid-receptor complex exists at low ionic strengths as a homodimer or as a heterodimer in which only one subunit possesses a steroid-binding site, and that the process of dissociation into subunits brought about by increasing the ionic strength is a process distinct from, but possibly preceding, the transformation phenomenon responsible for conferring DNA-binding properties on the complex.  相似文献   

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