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1.
Using L cell glucocorticoid receptors that have been immunopurified by adsorption to protein A Sepharose with a monoclonal antireceptor antibody, we have developed an assay to study the requirements for maintenance of steroid-binding capacity. After rapid purification by immunoadsorption, heteromeric receptor complexes retain the ability to bind glucocorticoid hormone. When the receptor complexes are warmed at 20 degrees C, steroid-binding capacity is lost, and the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90) dissociates from the receptor. The rates of both temperature- and salt-dependent dissociation of hsp90 parallel the rates of loss of hormone-binding activity. Molybdate and hydrogen peroxide stabilize the hsp90-receptor complex against temperature-dependent dissociation. Molybdate, however, is much more effective in stabilizing steroid-binding capacity than peroxide. Receptors that have been inactivated in the absence of molybdate or peroxide cannot be reactivated. Inactivation of steroid-binding capacity occurs in the presence or absence of reducing agent, and inactivation is not accompanied by receptor cleavage or dephosphorylation. Under no conditions does an hsp90-free receptor bind steroid. Receptor bound to hsp90 can be cleaved to the 27-kDa meroreceptor in the presence of molybdate with retention of both hsp90 and steroid-binding activity. These observations lead us to propose that hsp90 is necessary but not sufficient for maintaining a competent high affinity glucocorticoid-binding site. Although the 27-kDa meroreceptor fragment is not itself sufficient for a competent binding site, it is sufficient when it is associated with hsp90.  相似文献   

2.
Glucocorticoid receptor phosphorylation in mouse L-cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
This paper summarizes our observations on the phosphorylation state of untransformed and transformed glucocorticoid receptors isolated from 32P-labeled L-cells. The 300-350-kDa 9S untransformed murine glucocorticoid receptor complex is composed of a 100-kDa steroid-binding phosphoprotein and one or possibly two units of the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90), which is also a phosphoprotein. Transformation of this complex to the 4S DNA-binding state is accompanied by dissociation of hsp90. When receptors in cytosol are transformed by heating at 25 degrees C, there is no gross change in the degree of phosphorylation of the steroid-binding protein. Both receptors that are bound to DNA after transformation under cell-free conditions and receptors that are located in the nucleus of cells incubated at 37 degrees C in the presence of glucocorticoid are labeled with 32P. The results of experiments in which the 32P-labeled receptor was submitted to limited proteolysis suggest that the 16-kDa DNA-binding domain is phosphorylated and that the 28-kDa steroid-binding domain is not.  相似文献   

3.
[3H]Triamcinolone acetonide glucocorticoid receptor complexes from human salivary gland adenocarcinoma cells (HSG cells) were shown to be activated with an accompanying decrease in molecular weight in intact cells, as analyzed by gel filtration, DEAE chromatography, the mini-column method and glycerol gradient centrifugation. Glucocorticoid receptor complexes consist of steroid-binding protein (or glucocorticoid receptor) and non-steroid-binding factors such as the heat-shock protein of molecular weight 90,000. To determine whether the steroid-binding protein decreases in molecular weight upon activation, affinity labeling of glucocorticoid receptor in intact cells by incubation with [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate, which forms a covalent complex with glucocorticoid receptor, was performed. Analysis by gel filtration and a mini-column method indicated that [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled receptor complexes can be activated under culture conditions at 37 degrees C. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled steroid-binding protein resolved only one specific 92 kDa form. Furthermore, only one specific band at 92 kDa was detected in the nuclear fraction which was extracted from the cells incubated at 37 degrees C. These results suggest that there is no change in the molecular weight of steroid-binding protein of HSG cell glucocorticoid receptor complexes upon activation and that the molecular weight of nuclear-binding receptor does not change, although the molecular weight of activated glucocorticoid receptor complexes does decrease. Triamcinolone acetonide induced an inhibitory effect on DNA synthesis in HSG cells. Dexamethasone 21-mesylate exerted no such effect and blocked the action of triamcinolone acetonide on DNA synthesis. These results suggests that dexamethasone 21-mesylate acts as antagonist of glucocorticoid in HSG cells. The fact that dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled receptor complexes could be activated and could bind to DNA or nuclei as well as triamcinolone acetonide-labeled complexes suggests that dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled complexes can not induce specific gene expression after their binding to DNA.  相似文献   

4.
Glucocorticoid hormone receptors are present in the soluble fraction of target cell homogenates as large entities (Mr approximately 300,000) that are unable to interact with DNA. These large complexes contain an Mr approximately 94,000 steroid- and DNA-binding polypeptide, in association with an Mr approximately 90,000 non-ligand-binding entity, which has been identified as a heat shock protein, hsp90. This protein has been purified to near homogeneity as a component of the non-activated receptor complex. Characterization of the purified protein revealed its presence as a dimer in the large receptor form. Dissociation of the receptor-hsp90 complex can be induced by heat treatment only when ligand is bound to the receptor, as demonstrated by specific DNA-binding assay and sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation, hsp90 represents ca 1% of total proteins in rat liver cytosol, and milligram amounts were purified using a combination of high performance ion exchange and gel permeation chromatography. Monospecific antibodies were raised in rabbits. They were found to precipitate the intact non-activated glucocorticoid receptor, as well as the Mr approximately 27,000 steroid-binding fragment of the receptor generated by trypsin treatment, indicating that hsp90 interacts with the steroid-binding domain of the glucocorticoid receptor. Finally, translation of glucocorticoid receptor mRNA in reticulocyte lysate yields a protein which also interacts with hsp90 and binds to DNA only after ligand-binding and heat treatment. Thus, the glucocorticoid receptor is synthesized in a non-activated form also in vitro.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Transformed and bacterially expressed glucocorticoid receptors free from Mr 90,000 heat shock protein (hsp90) have a 100-fold lower steroid-binding affinity than the hsp90-bound nontransformed receptor, suggesting that hsp90 is needed for high-affinity steroid binding [Nemoto, T., Ohara-Nemoto, Y., Denis, M., & Gustafsson, J.-A. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 1880-1886]. To investigate whether or not this phenomenon is common to all steroid receptors, we investigated the steroid-binding affinities of bacterially expressed and transformed androgen receptors. The C-terminal portion of the rat androgen receptor containing the putative steroid-binding domain was expressed as a fusion protein of protein A in Escherichia coli. The recombinant protein bound a synthetic androgen, [3H]R1881, with high affinity (Kd = 0.8 +/- 0.3 nM). Glycerol gradient analysis revealed that the recombinant protein sedimented at around the 3S region irrespective of the presence of molybdate, indicating that the receptor is present in monomeric form. The steroid-free transformed androgen receptor was obtained by exposure of rat submandibular gland cytosol to 0.4 M NaCl in the absence of steroid. High-performance ion-exchange liquid chromatography analysis showed that the transformed androgen receptor bound to [3H]R1881 with high affinity. Thus these observations indicate that, in contrast to the glucocorticoid receptor, hsp90 is not required for the high-affinity steroid binding of the androgen receptor. In addition, the hsp90-free androgen receptor prebound with radioinert R1881 was efficiently relabeled with [3H]R1881, while the triamcinolone acetonide-bound, transformed glucocorticoid receptor failed in ligand exchange. The inability to achieve ligand exchange probably reflects the low steroid-binding affinity of this entity.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
We have used bifunctional reagents to examine the subunit composition of the non-DNA-binding form of the rat and human glucocorticoid receptor. Treatment of intact cells and cell extracts with a reversible cross-linker, followed by electrophoretic analysis of immunoadsorbed receptor revealed that three proteins of apparent approximate molecular masses, 90, 53 and 14 kDa are associated with the receptor. The first of these was identified immunochemically as a 90-kDa heat-shock protein (hsp90). The complex isolated from HeLa cells contained 2.2 mol hsp90/mol steroid-binding subunit. Cross-linking of the receptor complex in the cytosol completely prevented salt-induced dissociation of the subunits. The cross-linked receptor was electrophoretically resolved into two oligomeric complexes of apparent molecular mass 288 kDa and 347 kDa, reflecting the association of the 53-kDa protein with a fraction of the receptor. Since no higher oligomeric complexes could be generated by cross-linking cell extracts under different conditions, we conclude that most of the untransformed cytosolic receptor is devoid of additional components.  相似文献   

9.
P R Housley 《Biochemistry》1990,29(14):3578-3585
Fluoride, in the presence of aluminum ions, reversibly inhibits the temperature-mediated inactivation of unoccupied glucocorticoid receptors in cytosol preparations from mouse L cells. The effect is concentration-dependent, with virtually complete stabilization of specific glucocorticoid-binding capacity at 2 mM fluoride and 100 microM aluminum. These concentrations of aluminum and fluoride are ineffective when used separately. Aluminum fluoride also stabilizes receptors toward inactivation by gel filtration and ammonium sulfate precipitation. Aluminum fluoride prevents temperature-dependent transformation of steroid-receptor complexes to the DNA-binding state. Aluminum fluoride does not inhibit calf intestine alkaline phosphatase, and unoccupied receptors inactivated by this enzyme in the presence of aluminum fluoride can be completely reactivated by dithiothreitol. The effects of aluminum fluoride are due to stabilization of the complex between the glucocorticoid receptor and the 90-kDa mammalian heat-shock protein hsp90, which suggests that aluminum fluoride interacts directly with the receptor. Endogenous thermal inactivation of receptors in cytosol is not accompanied by receptor dephosphorylation. However, inactivation is correlated with dissociation of hsp90 from the unoccupied receptor. These results support the proposal that hsp90 is required for the receptor to bind steroid and dissociation of hsp90 is sufficient to inactivate the unoccupied receptor.  相似文献   

10.
[3H]Triamcinolone acetonide glucocorticoid receptor complexes from human salivary gland adenocarcinoma cells (HSG cells) were shown to be activated with an accompanying decrease in molecular weight in intact cells, as analyzed by gel filtration, DEAE chromatography, the mini-column method and glycerol gradient centrifugation. Glucocorticoid receptor complexes consist of steroid-binding protein (or glucocorticoid receptor) and non-steroid-binding factors such as the heat-shock protein of molecular weight 90 000. To determine whether the steroid-binding protein decreases in molecular weight upon activation, affinity labeling of glucocorticoid receptor in intact cells by incubation with [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate, which forms a covalent complex with glucocorticoid receptor, was performed. Analysis by gel filtration and a mini-column method indicated that [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled receptor complexes can be activated under culture conditions at 37°C. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled steroid-binding protein resolved only one specific 92 kDa form. Furthermore, only one specific band at 92 kDa was detected in the nuclear fraction which was extracted from the cells incubated at 37°C. These results suggest that there is no change in the molecular weight of steroid-binding protein of HSG cell glucocorticoid receptor complexes upon activation and that the molecular weight of nuclear-binding receptor does not change, although the molecular weight of activated glucocorticoid receptor complexes does decrease. Triamcinolone acetonide induced an inhibitory effect on DNA synthesis in HSG cells. Dexamethasone 21-mesylate exerted no such effect and blocked the action of triamcinolone acetonide on DNA synthesis. These results suggests that dexamethasone 21-mesylate acts as antagonist of glucocorticoid in HSG cells. The fact that dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled receptor complexes could be activated and could bind to DNA or nuclei aas well as triamcinolone acetonide-labeled complexes suggests that dexamethasone 21-mesylate-labeled complexes can not induce specific gene expression after their binding to DNA.  相似文献   

11.
To better understand assembly mechanisms of progesterone receptor (PR) complexes, we have developed a cell-free system for studying PR interactions with the 90- and 70-kDa heat shock proteins (hsp90 and hsp70), and we have used this system to examine requirements for hsp90 binding to PR. Purified chick PR, free of hsp90 and immobilized on an antibody affinity resin, will rebind hsp90 in rabbit reticulocyte lysate when several conditions are met. These include: 1) absence of progesterone, 2) elevated temperature (30 degrees C), 3) presence of ATP, and 4) presence of Mg2+. We have obtained maximal hsp90 binding to receptor when lysate is supplemented with 3 mM MgCl2 and an ATP-regenerating system. ATP depletion of lysate by dialysis or by enzymatic means blocks hsp90 binding to PR; likewise, addition of EDTA to lysate blocks hsp90 binding, but binding is restored by the addition of excess Mg2+. Addition to lysate of monoclonal antibody against hsp70 inhibits hsp90 binding to PR and destabilizes preformed complexes. Stabilization of hsp90-receptor complexes also requires ATP, indicating that ATP and hsp70 are needed to form and to maintain hsp90 complexes. Hormone-dependent activation of reconstituted receptor complexes was also examined. The addition of progesterone to the reticulocyte lysate promotes dissociation of hsp90 and hsp70 from the receptor. This also appears to require ATP and dissociation is most efficient in the presence of an ATP-regenerating system. In conclusion, these studies indicate that PR-hsp90 complexes do not self-assemble; instead, assembly is probably a multistep process requiring ATP and other cellular factors.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
We have translated the rat glucocorticoid receptor in both reticulocyte lysate and in wheat germ extract. Receptor synthesized in the reticulocyte lysate is immunoadsorbed by the 8D3 monoclonal antibody directed against the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90) and it has a normal ability to bind glucocorticoid in a high affinity manner. Although the wheat germ extract synthesizes the full length receptor, the receptor is not immunoadsorbed by 8D3 and we cannot demonstrate high affinity steroid binding. Receptor synthesized by the reticulocyte lysate can be immunoadsorbed by antibody directed against hsp90 as soon as the translation product is full length, suggesting that the receptor becomes associated with hsp90 late during translation or immediately at the termination of translation. When newly synthesized receptor is bound with steroid and incubated at 25 degrees C, it is converted to a form that binds to DNA. This study provides direct evidence that association of hsp90 with the glucocorticoid receptor is a very early event and that the newly formed heteromeric receptor-hsp90 complex is fully competent to undergo transformation.  相似文献   

14.
The steroid-binding domain of the human glucocorticoid receptor was expressed in Escherichia coli either as a fusion protein with protein A or under control of the T7 RNA polymerase promoter. The recombinant proteins were found to bind steroids with the normal specificity for a glucocorticoid receptor but with reduced affinity (Kd for triamcinolone acetonide approximately 70 nM). Glycerol gradient analysis of the E. coli lystate containing the recombinant protein indicated no interaction between the glucocorticoid receptor fragment and heat shock proteins. However, synthesis of the corresponding fragments of glucocorticoid receptor in vitro using rabbit reticulocyte lystate resulted in the formation of proteins that bound triamcinolone acetonide with high affinity (Kd 2nM). Glycerol gradient analysis of these proteins, with and without molybdate, indicated that the in vitro synthesised receptor fragments formed complexes with hsp90 as previously shown for the full-length rat glucocorticoid receptor. Radiosequence analysis of the recombinant steroid-binding domain expressed in E. coli and affinity labelled with dexamethasone mesylate identified binding of the steroid to Cys-638 predominantly. However, all cysteine residues within the steroid-binding domain were affinity labelled to a certain degree indicating that the recombinant protein has a structure similar to the native receptor but more open and accessible.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
We have used three methods to measure the stoichiometry of the glucocorticoid receptor and the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90) in L-cell glucocorticoid receptor complexes that were purified by immunoadsorption to protein A-Sepharose with an anti-receptor monoclonal antibody, followed by a minimal washing procedure that permits retention of receptor-associated protein. In two of the methods, receptor was quantitated by radioligand binding, and receptor-specific hsp90 was quantitated against a standard curve of purified hsp90, either on Coomassie blue stained SDS gels by laser densitometry or on Western blots by quantitative immunoblotting with 125I-labeled counterantibody. The stoichiometry values obtained by densitometry and immunoblotting are 7 and 6 mol of hsp90/mol of receptor, respectively. In a third method, which detects total receptor protein rather than just steroid-bound receptor, the ratio of hsp90 to receptor was determined by immunopurifying receptor complexes from [35S]methionine-labeled L cells, and the amount of 35S incorporated into receptor and hsp90 was corrected for the established methionine content of the respective proteins. In complexes from L cells which are labeled to steady state (48 h), the ratio of hsp90 to GR is 4:1. When immunoadsorbed receptor complexes are washed extensively with 0.5 M NaCl and 0.4% Triton X-100 in the presence of molybdate, the ratio of hsp90 to GR is 2:1. In addition to hsp90, preparations of [35S]methionine-labeled untransformed receptor complex also contain a 55-kDa protein that the conclusion that the untransformed L-cell glucocorticoid receptor exists in cytosol in a much larger heteromeric complex than considered to date.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Binding of heat shock proteins to the avian progesterone receptor.   总被引:13,自引:4,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
The protein composition of the avian progesterone receptor was analyzed by immune isolation of receptor complexes and gel electrophoresis of the isolated proteins. Nonactivated cytosol receptor was isolated in association with the 90-kilodalton (kDa) heat shock protein, hsp90, as has been described previously. A 70-kDa protein was also observed and was shown by Western immunoblotting to react with an antibody specific to the 70-kDa heat shock protein. Thus, two progesterone receptor-associated proteins are identical, or closely related, to heat shock proteins. When the two progesterone receptor species, A and B, were isolated separately in the absence of hormone, both were obtained in association with hsp90 and the 70-kDa protein. However, activated receptor isolated from oviduct nuclear extracts was associated with the 70-kDa protein, but not with hsp90. A hormone-dependent dissociation of hsp90 from the cytosolic form of the receptor complex was observed within the first hour of in vivo progesterone treatment, which could explain the lack of hsp90 in nuclear receptor complexes. In a cell-free system, hsp90 binding to receptor was stabilized by molybdate but disrupted by high salt. These treatments, however, did not alter the binding of the 70-kDa protein to receptor. Association of the 70-kDa protein with the receptor could be disrupted by the addition of ATP at elevated temperatures (23 degrees C). The receptor-associated 70-kDa protein is an ATP-binding protein, as demonstrated by its affinity labeling with azido[32P]ATP. These results indicate that the two receptor-associated proteins interact with the progesterone receptor by different mechanisms and that they are likely to affect the structure or function of the receptor in different ways.  相似文献   

19.
The glucocorticoid receptor (GR) occurs in cells in the form of a hormone-responsive complex (HRC) with hsp90. The HRC is dynamic, with hsp90 constantly directing disassembly, and hsp70, assisted by hsp90, driving reassembly. WCL2 cells stably overexpress GR to an extent that reduces the excess of hsp90 and hsp70 over GR by about 10-fold, compared to the ratio in HeLa cells. Yet the half-lives of the HRC in WCL2 and HeLa cells are comparable. As a result, the rate of assembly in WCL2 is overwhelmed by accumulation of the non-hormone-binding form of GR in its complex with hsp70 and hsp90. This form comprised some 50% of total GR in WCL2 cells. When the cells were heated to 44 degrees C, the hormone-binding activity and solubility of GR fell in parallel, and the receptor formed heavy aggregates by sequestering large amounts of hsp70. About 40% of this aggregated receptor was degraded in cells recovering at 37 degrees C in the presence of cycloheximide. Concentration of GR protein increased with increasing induction of hsp70 following exposure to 41-44 degrees C. However, balance between hormone-binding and inert forms of GR could shift in either direction in response to the increase or decrease of hsp90 induction, depending on the temperature. Suppression of degradation following re-exposure of the cells to 44 degrees C correlated better with induction of hsp90 than hsp70. We infer that sequestration of hsp70 by heat-unfolded receptor is the primary factor opposing degradation, while induction of hsp90 acts to further suppress degradation by accelerating HRC assembly.  相似文献   

20.
Two phosphoproteins are adsorbed to protein-A-Sepharose when cytosol from 32P-labeled L-cells is incubated with a monoclonal antibody against the glucocorticoid receptor: one is a 98-100-kDa phosphoprotein that contains the steroid-binding site and the other is a 90-kDa nonsteroid-binding phosphoprotein that is associated with the untransformed, molybdate-stabilized receptor (Housley, P. R., Sanchez, E. R., Westphal, H.M., Beato, M., and Pratt, W.B. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, in press). In this paper we show that the 90-kDa receptor-associated phosphoprotein is an abundant cytosolic protein that reacts with a monoclonal antibody that recognizes the 90-kDa phosphoprotein that binds steroid receptors in the chicken oviduct. The 90-kDa protein immunoadsorbed from L-cell cytosol with this antibody reacts on Western blots with rabbit antiserum prepared against the 89-kDa chicken heat shock protein. Immunoadsorption of molybdate-stabilized cytosol by antibodies against the glucocorticoid receptor results in the presence of a 90-kDa protein that interacts on Western blots with the antiserum against the chicken heat shock protein. The association between the 90-kDa protein and the receptor is only seen by this technique when molybdate is present to stabilize the complex; and when steroid-bound receptors are incubated at 25 degrees C to transform them to the DNA-binding state, the 90-kDa protein dissociates. These observations are consistent with the proposal that the untransformed glucocorticoid receptor in L-cells exists in a complex with the murine 90-kDa heat shock protein.  相似文献   

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