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1.
Two species of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) receptors in human placenta have been delineated on the basis of their immunoreactivity with an autoantiserum (B-2) to the insulin receptor. When all the IGF-I binding sites in solubilized human placenta were assayed by polyethylene glycol precipitation, a curvilinear Scatchard plot was obtained which could be resolved into two single classes of binding sites: one immunoprecipitable by B-2 IgG and the other, nonimmunoprecipitable. The B-2 reactive sites bound IGF-I with lower affinity (Kd = 7.1 X 10(-10) M) than the B-2 nonreactive sites (Kd = 2.1 X 10(-10) M) and cross-reacted more readily with insulin, the IGF-I/insulin-binding potencies being congruent to 120 and congruent to 1100, respectively. Both receptor subtypes bound IGF-I with congruent to 30-fold higher affinity than multiplication-stimulating activity, and, after affinity cross-linking with 125I-IGF-I, migrated as specific reduced bands of Mr = 138,000 during sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The subunit sizes of the B-2 reactive IGF-I receptor were similar to those of the insulin receptor. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of 125I-labeled receptors immunoprecipitated by autoantiserum B-2 or autoantiserum B-10 (which recognizes only insulin receptors) revealed, in both cases, specific reduced bands of Mr = 130,000 and 90,000; the same bands were also seen after sequential precipitation with B-10 and B-2 antisera to enrich the proportion of IGF-I receptors recovered. The presence of two distinct binding and immunoreactive species of IGF-I receptors in human placenta raises the possibility that cell- or tissue-specific isotypes of the IGF-I receptor could mediate the different biological actions of IGF-I.  相似文献   

2.
One-dimensional and two-dimensional peptide-mapping techniques are used to identify the protein which gives rise to the 72,000 dalton alpha-chymotryptic fragment previously shown to be the membrane attachment site for spectrin. Peptide maps of the 72,000 dalton fragment are very different from maps of Bands 1, 2, 2.9, 3, 3.1, 4.1, and 4.2 and very similar to maps of the apparently closely homologous polypeptides, Bands 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, and 2.6. Limited proteolysis of erythrocyte membranes is shown to generate Band 3', another polypeptide which has been associated with spectrin-binding activity. Peptide maps of Band 3' are very similar to maps of Band 2.1, suggesting that Band 3' is also a proteolytic fragment of Band 2.1. It is concluded that Band 2.1 and possibly some or all of the other, related polypeptides which electrophorese in the 2 region is (are) the spectrin-binding protein(s) of the human erythrocyte.  相似文献   

3.
Specific binding sites for somatostatin have been identified and characterized in cytosolic fraction of rabbit gastric mucosa at both antrum and fundus levels. The binding depended on time, temperature and pH, and was reversible and saturable. The stoichiometric data suggested the presence of two classes of binding sites: a class with high affinity (Kd = 26.7 and 37.0 nM in antrum and fundus, respectively) and low capacity (2.1 and 4.1 pmol somatostatin/mg protein in antrum and fundus, respectively), and a class with low affinity (Kd = 246.4 and 162.5 nM in antrum and fundus, respectively) and high capacity (134.1 and 110.9 pmol somatostatin/mg protein in antrum and fundus, respectively) at 25 degrees C and pH 7.4. The binding sites were shown to be highly specific for somatostatin since neuropeptides such as Leu-enkephalin, neurotensin and substance P behaved as ligands with very low affinity.  相似文献   

4.
Studies have been made on the binding of 125I-glucagon by isolated chick hepatocytes. It was shown that pH and temperature dependence of the binding does not differ from that in rat hepatocytes. Optimum binding was observed at pH 7.6, the rate of binding being higher at 37 degrees C as compared to that at 20 degrees C, although the binding capacity increased with the decrease in the temperature. Unlabeled glucagon was able to compete with 125I-glucagon at the binding sites. Scatchard plot was found to be curvilinear revealing two classes of the binding sites with Kd values 10(-9) and 10(-7) M at temperatures 20 and 37 degrees C correspondingly. Earlier studies revealed in rats the binding sites of a sole class with Kd value 10(-9) M. Preincubation of cells with native glucagon results in changes of labeled glucagon binding, the effect being proportional to the concentration of native glucagon. Preincubation effect was observed at 37 degrees C, being absent at 20 degrees C; the effect was due to the decrease in the number of both high and low affinity binding sites. The presence of down-regulation of glucagon receptors in chick hepatocytes is suggested.  相似文献   

5.
《The Journal of cell biology》1987,105(6):2837-2845
Adducin is an erythrocyte membrane skeletal phosphoprotein comprised of two related subunits of 105,000 and 100,000 Mr. These peptides form a functional heterodimer, and the smaller of the two binds calmodulin in a calcium-dependent fashion. Although this protein has been physicochemically characterized, its function remains unknown. We have examined the interaction of human adducin with actin and with human erythrocyte spectrin using sedimentation, electrophoretic, and morphologic techniques. Purified adducin binds actin at physiologic ionic strength and bundles it into arrays of laterally arranged filaments, the adducin forming cross-bridges between the filaments at 35.2 /- 3.8 (2 SD) nm intervals. The stoichiometry of high affinity adducin binding to actin at saturation is 1:7, corresponding to a dimer of adducin for every actin helical unit. Adducin also promotes the binding of spectrin to actin independently of protein 4.1. At saturation, each adducin promotes the association of one spectrin heterodimer. The formation of this ternary spectrin-actin-adducin complex is independent of the assembly path, and the complex exists in a readily reversible equilibrium with the free components. The binding of adducin to actin and its ability to stimulate spectrin-actin binding is down-regulated by calmodulin in a calcium-dependent fashion. These results thus identify a putative role for adducin, and define a calcium- and calmodulin-dependent mechanism whereby higher states of actin association and its interaction with spectrin in the erythrocyte may be controlled.  相似文献   

6.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY) binding sites in rat cardiac ventricular membranes have been characterized in detail. 125I-NPY bound to the membranes with high affinity. Binding was saturable, reversible and specific, and depended on time, pH and temperature. Analysis of the binding data obtained under optimal conditions, 2 hr, 18 degrees C and at pH 7.5, revealed the presence of low and high affinity binding sites. The high affinity binding sites had an apparent dissociation constant (Kd) of 0.38 nM and a binding capacity (Bmax) of 7.13 fmol/mg protein. The apparent Kd and Bmax for low affinity binding sites were 22.34 nM and 261.25 fmol/mg protein, respectively. Peptides unrelated to NPY did not compete with 125I-NPY for the binding sites even at 1 microM concentrations, whereas homologous peptides, peptide YY (PYY) and pancreatic polypeptide (PP), and NPY(13-36) inhibited 125I-NPY binding but with lower potency compared to NPY. 125I-NPY binding was sensitive to the nonhydrolyzable GTP analog, Gpp(NH)p, suggesting that the NPY receptor is coupled to the adenylate cyclase system. The ventricular membrane receptor characterized in this study may play an important role in mediating the physiological effects of NPY in the heart.  相似文献   

7.
Prothrombin possesses two high affinity and four low affinity gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla)-dependent gadolinium binding sites. Earlier work (Price, P. A., Williamson, M. K., and Epstein, D. J. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 1172-1176) has shown that tritium can be specifically incorporated at the gamma-carbon of Gla in proteins at pH 5. In the present work we show that inclusion of saturating concentrations of Ca2+ in nondenaturing buffer systems ranging from pH 5.5 to 8.5 prevents the exchange of tritium into all 10 Gla residues of prothrombin. Similarly, saturating concentrations of Gd3+ prevent tritium incorporation into Gla at pH 5.5. Positive cooperativity was observed for the binding of Gd3+ to human prothrombin (at pH 5.5) for the two high affinity sites (Kd congruent to 35 nM). The four low affinity sites bind Gd3+ with a Kd congruent to 5 microM. Incubation of prothrombin ranging in concentrations from 10 to 40 microM with 2 eq of Gd3+ at pH 5.5 prevents 5.7 (average of seven determinations) Gla residues from tritium incorporation. Sedimentation velocity experiments conducted at pH 5.5 indicate that prothrombin in the presence of saturating concentrations of Gd3+ polymerizes, most likely, to a trimer. Further, in the presence of 2 eq of Gd3+, calculated percent weight average concentration of monomer prothrombin is congruent to 100% at 10 microM, approximately equal to 95% at 20 microM, and congruento to 80% at 40 microM protein concentration. Thus, it appears that under conditions in which prothrombin primarily exists as a monomer, occupancy of the initial two metal binding sites by Gd3+ involves six Gla residues.  相似文献   

8.
1. The presence of specific binding of [125I]SEA with human splenocytes is established. 2. The association of toxin at 4 C is characterized by saturation, reversibility and a great affinity to a receptor (Kd = 4.0 x 10(-7) M). 3. The number of binding sites on a cell is equal to 6000. 4. At 23 C the binding of labelled toxin with a cell described by a biphasic curve. 5. Priming increases the association of SEA with the splenocytes and correspondingly increases the production level of gamma-interferon.  相似文献   

9.
The binding of 125I-labeled human prothrombin to native and papain-treated tissue thromboplastin in the presence of CaCl2 or EDTA was studied. The Scatchard plots for the protein binding suggest the presence at thromboplastin surface of two types of binding sites, high affinity [Kd(app) = 7.4.10(-8) M] and moderate affinity [Kd(app) = 7.9.10(-5) M]. The removal of Ca2+ did not influence the Kd (values for these) sites but markedly reduced their number. Proteolysis by papain caused a decrease in the affinity of high affinity sites without affecting the Kd values of the moderate affinity sites yet caused a proportional increase in the number of both high and moderate affinity sites in the presence of Ca2+. At low prothrombin concentrations a positive cooperativity of protein binding at high affinity sites in the presence of Ca2+ was observed.  相似文献   

10.
We have established a new binding assay in which 125I-labeled synaptic vesicles are incubated with brain spectrin covalently immobilized on cellulosic membranes in a microfiltration apparatus. We obtained saturable, high affinity, salt- (optimum at 50-70 mM NaCl) and pH- (optimum at pH 7.5-7.8) dependent binding. Nonlinear regression analysis of the binding isotherm indicated one site binding with a Kd = 59 micrograms/ml and a maximal binding capacity = 1.9 micrograms vesicle protein per microgram spectrin. The fact that the binding of spectrin was via synapsin was demonstrated in three ways. (a) Binding of synaptic vesicles to immobilized spectrin was eliminated by prior extraction with 1 M KCl. When the peripheral membrane proteins in the 1 M KCl extract were separated by SDS-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose paper and incubated with 125I-brain spectrin, 96% of the total radioactivity was associated with five polypeptides of 80, 75, 69, 64, and 40 kD. All five polypeptides reacted with an anti-synapsin I polyclonal antibody, and the 80- and 75-kD polypeptides comigrated with authentic synapsin Ia and synapsin Ib. The 69- and 64-kD polypeptides are either proteolytic fragments of synapsin I or represent synapsin IIa and synapsin IIb. (b) Pure synapsin I was capable of competitively inhibiting the binding of radioiodinated synaptic vesicles to immobilized brain spectrin with a Kl = 46 nM. (c) Fab fragments of anti-synapsin I were capable of inhibiting the binding of radioiodinated synaptic vesicles to immobilized brain spectrin. These three observations clearly establish that synapsin I is a primary receptor for brain spectrin on the cytoplasmic surface of the synaptic vesicle membrane.  相似文献   

11.
The Ca2(+)-dependent regulation of the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton was investigated. The low-salt extract of erythroid membranes, which is mainly composed of spectrin, protein 4.1, and actin, confers a Ca2+ sensitivity on its interaction with F-actin. This Ca2+ sensitivity is fortified by calmodulin and antagonized by trifluoperazine, a potent calmodulin inhibitor. Additionally, calmodulin is detected in the low-salt extract. These results suggest that calmodulin is the sole Ca2(+)-sensitive factor in the low-salt extract. The main target of calmodulin in the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton was further examined. Under native conditions, calmodulin forms a stable and equivalent complex with protein 4.1 as determined by calmodulin affinity chromatography, cross-linking experiments, and fluorescence binding assays with an apparent Kd of 5.5 x 10(-7) M irrespective of the free Ca2+ concentration. Domain mapping with chymotryptic digestion reveals that the calmodulin-binding site resides within the N-terminal 30-kDa fragment of protein 4.1. In contrast, the interaction of calmodulin with spectrin is unexpectedly weak (Kd = 1.2 x 10(-4) M). Given the content of calmodulin in erythrocytes (2-5 microM), these results imply that the major target for calmodulin in the erythroid membrane cytoskeleton is protein 4.1. Low- and high-shear viscometry and binding assays reveal that an equivalent complex of calmodulin with protein 4.1 regulates the spectrin/actin interaction in a Ca2(+)-dependent manner. At a low Ca2+ concentration, protein 4.1 potentiates the actin cross-linking and the actin binding activities of spectrin. At a high Ca2+ concentration, the protein 4.1-potentiated actin cross-linking activity but not the actin binding activity of spectrin is suppressed by Ca2+/calmodulin. The Ca2(+)-dependent regulation of the spectrin/protein 4.1/calmodulin/actin interaction is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
We characterized binding and endocytosis of 125I-bovine lactoferrin by isolated rat hepatocytes. Iron-depleted (apo-Lf), approximately 30% saturated (Lf), and iron-saturated (holo-Lf) lactoferrin were used. At 4 degrees C, cells bound 125I-apo-Lf and 125I-holo-Lf with nearly identical apparent first order kinetics (t1/2 = approximately 42 min). Holo-Lf and apo-Lf competed with each other for binding. Hepatocytes bound lactoferrin optimally at pH greater than or equal to 7 but poorly at pH less than or equal to 6. Ca2+ (greater than or equal to 100 microM) enhanced Lf binding to cells, and holo-Lf remained monomeric with Ca2+ present as determined by gel filtration chromatography. With Ca2+, cells exhibited approximately 10(6) high affinity sites (Kd approximately 20 nM) and approximately 10(7) low affinity sites (Kd approximately 700 nM) for both apo- and holo-Lf. Without Ca2+, cells bound 125I-holo-Lf by the low affinity component only. EGTA and dextran sulfate together released greater than or equal to 90% 125I-Lf prebound at 4 degrees C, but individually removed separate populations of surface-bound 125I-Lf. Cells bound 125I-Lf in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner with dextran sulfate present. We conclude that the high affinity but not the low affinity sites require Ca2+; only the low affinity sites are dextran sulfate-sensitive. Neither transferrin nor asialo-orosomucoid blocked lactoferrin binding to hepatocytes. Some cationic proteins but not others inhibited lactoferrin binding. At 37 degrees C, hepatocytes endocytosed 125I-apo-Lf and 125I-holo-Lf similarly, and hyperosmolality (greater than 500 mmol/kg) blocked uptake by approximately 90%. These data support the proposal that hepatocytes regulate blood lactoferrin concentration by receptor-mediated endocytosis.  相似文献   

13.
The red cell membrane skeletal network is constructed from actin, spectrin and protein 4.1 in a molar ratio of actin subunits/spectrin heterodimer/protein 4.1 of 2:1:1. This represents saturation of the actin filaments, since incubation with extraneous spectrin and protein 4.1 leads to no binding of additional spectrin, either to the inner surface of ghost membranes or to lipid-free membrane cytoskeletons. Partial extraction of spectrin from the membrane is accompanied by release of actin under all conditions. Regardless of the proportion of spectrin extracted, the molar ratio of spectrin dimers/actin subunits is constant at 1:2. This is not the result of release or cooperative breakdown of whole lattice junctions from the network, for the number of actin filaments, judged by capacity to nucleate polymerisation of added G-actin, remains unchanged even when as much as 60% of the total spectrin has been lost. A similar 1:2:1 stoichiometry characterises the complex formed when G-actin is allowed to polymerise in the presence of varying amounts of spectrin and protein 4.1. When this complex is treated with the depolymerising agent, 1 M guanidine hydrochloride, it breaks down into smaller units of the same stoichiometry. After cross-linking these can be recovered from a gel-filtration column. Complexes prepared starting from G-actin appear to be much more stable than those formed when spectrin and protein 4.1 are bound to F-actin.  相似文献   

14.
Neural cells in culture (NG-108, PC12, chick dorsal root ganglion, chick spinal cord, and rat astrocytes) bind laminin with an apparent Kd of congruent to 10(-9) M. Laminin affinity chromatography of chick brain membranes washed with 150 mM NaCl and eluted with 0.2 M glycine buffer, pH 3.5, yields a single protein with an apparent molecular mass of 67 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions. Isoelectric focusing and peptide mapping indicate that the 67-kDa protein is distinct from bovine serum albumin (68 kDa) but indistinguishable from high affinity laminin receptors isolated from skeletal muscle. After electroblotting onto nitrocellulose paper and probing with 125I-laminin, this putative laminin receptor binds laminin specifically (100 ng/ml). A second protein (congruent to 120-140 kDa) is also detected with 125I-laminin (100 ng/ml) in the laminin affinity-purified membrane proteins. Both 67- and congruent to 120-140-kDa proteins can be laminin affinity-purified from cultures enriched for neurons (greater than 90%) following metabolic labeling with [35S]methionine. Our data suggest that neural cells (dorsal root ganglion, central nervous system neurons, astrocytes, and several neural cell lines) have high affinity binding sites for laminin and that two membrane proteins, 67- and congruent to 120-140-kDa, are responsible at least in part for this binding.  相似文献   

15.
S J Frost  R H Raja  P H Weigel 《Biochemistry》1990,29(45):10425-10432
125I-HA, prepared by chemical modification at the reducing sugar, specifically binds to rat hepatocytes in suspension or culture. Intact hepatocytes have relatively few surface 125I-HA binding sites and show low specific binding. However, permeabilization of hepatocytes with the nonionic detergent digitonin results in increased specific 125I-HA binding (45-65%) and a very large increase in the number of specific 125I-HA binding sites. Scatchard analysis of equilibrium 125I-HA binding to permeabilized hepatocytes in suspension at 4 degrees C indicates a Kd = 1.8 x 10(-7) M and 1.3 x 10(6) molecules of HA (Mr approximately 30,000) bound per cell at saturation. Hepatocytes in primary culture for 24 h show the same affinity but the total number of HA molecules bound per cell at saturation decreases to approximately 6.2 x 10(5). Increasing the ionic strength above physiologic concentrations decreases 125I-HA binding to permeable cells, whereas decreasing the ionic strength above causes an approximately 4-fold increase. The divalent cation chelator EGTA does not prevent binding nor does it release 125I-HA bound in the presence of 2 mM CaCl2, although higher divalent cation concentrations stimulate 125I-HA binding. Ten millimolar CaCl2 or MnCl2 increases HA binding 3-6-fold compared to EGTA-treated cells. Ten millimolar MgCl2, SrCl2, or BaCl2 increased HA binding by 2-fold. The specific binding of 125I-HA to digitonin-treated hepatocytes at 4 degrees C increased greater than 10-fold at pH 5.0 as compared to pH 7.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
We utilized high specific activity, [32P]-labelled ligands to measure the binding of Ins(1,3,4,5)P4 and Ins(1,4,5)P3 to membranes prepared from bovine parathyroid glands. [32P]Ins(1,3,4,5)P4 bound rapidly and reversibly to parathyroid membranes, and the binding data could be fitted by the interaction of the ligand with two sites, one with Kd = 6.8 x 10(-9) M and Bmax = 26 fmol/mg protein and a second, lower affinity site, with Kd = 4.1 x 10(-7) M and Bmax = 400 fmol/mg protein. InsP5 was 10-20 fold less potent than InsP4, and Ins(1,3,4)P3 and Ins(1,4,5)P3 were nearly 1000-fold less potent in displacing [32P]Ins(1,3,4,5)P4. [32P]Ins(1,4,5)P3, on the other hand, bound to a single class of sites with Kd = 7.6 x 10(-9) M and Bmax = 34 fmol/mg. While the binding of [32P]Ins(1,4,5)P3 increased markedly on raising pH from 5 to 8, the binding of [32P]Ins(1,3,4,5)P4 decreased by 75% over this range of pH. Thus, [32P]-labelled Ins(1,3,4,5)P4 and Ins(1,4,5)P3 may be used to identify distinct binding sites which may represent physiologically relevant intracellular receptors for InsP3 and InsP4 in parathyroid cells.  相似文献   

17.
Concanavalin A, which binds to specific carbohydrate determinants on the cell surface, was used to investigate the binding of prolactin to its receptors in liver membranes from female rats. The binding of 125I-labeled ovine prolactin to receptors was sharply inhibited by concanavalin A. This effect was reversed by the competitive sugar alpha-methyl-D-mannopyranoside and thus required the presence of specifically bound lectin. Concentrations of concanavalin A of up to 50 mu/ml caused a progressive decrease in the apparent affinity of the prolactin receptor for hormone. When higher concentrations were used, the number of available binding sites decreased. Concanavalin A-resistant receptors, about 30% of the total, had the same dissociation constant (Kd) as the controls. The binding of 125I-labeled concanavalin A in the same membrane preparations showed the presence of two distinct types of concanavalin A binding. At low concentrations, the lectin bound with high affinity (Kd approximately equal to 6.6 . 10(-8) M. At high lectin concentrations, low affinity (Kd approximately equal to 6.7 . 10(-5) M) binding predominated. Since high affinity concanavalin A binding was saturated at 50 microgram/ml, this class of binding most likely alters the affinity of the prolactin receptor for hormone; low affinity concanavalin A binding may mask prolactin receptors, making them inaccessible to the hormone. Binding sites for concanavalin A and prolactin appear to be independent but closely related since (i) concanavalin A did not displace bound prolactin from its receptor, and (ii) detergent-solubilized 125I-labeled prolactin-receptor complexes bound to concanavalin A-Sepharose and were eluted by alpha-methyl-D-mannopyranoside.  相似文献   

18.
A specific association between spectrin and the inner surface of the human erythrocyte membrane has been examined by measuring the binding of purified [32P]spectrin to inside out, spectrin-depleted vesicles and to right side out ghost vesicles. Spectrin was labeled by incubating erythrocytes with 32Pi, and eluted from the ghost membranes by extraction in 0.3 mM NaPO4, pH 7.6. [32P]Spectrin was separated from actin and other proteins and isolated in a nonaggregated state as a So20,w = 7 S (in 0.3 mM NaPO4) or So20,w = 8 S (in 20 mM KCl, 0.3 mM NaPO4) protein after sedimentation on linear sucrose gradients. Binding of [32P]spectrin to inverted vesicles devoid of spectrin and actin was at least 10-fold greater than to right side out membranes, and exhibited different properties. Association with inside out vesicles was slow, was decreased to the value for right side out vesicles at high pH, or after heating spectrin above 50 degrees prior to assay, and was saturable with increasing levels of spectrin. Binding to everted vesicles was rapid, unaffected by pH or by heating spectrin, and rose linearly with the concentration of spectrin. Scatchard plots of binding to inverted vesicles were linear at pH 7.6, with a KD of 45 microng/ml, while at pH 6.6, plots were curvilinear and consistent with two types of interactions with a KD of 4 and 19 microng/ml, respectively. The maximal binding capacity at both pH values was about 200 microng of spectrin/mg of membrane protein. Unlabeled spectrin competed for binding with 50% displacement at 27 microng/ml. [32P]Spectrin dissociated and associated with inverted vesicles with an identical dependence on ionic strength as observed for elution of native spectrin from ghosts. MgCl2, CaCl2 (1 to 4 mM) and EDTA (0.5 to 1 mM) had little effect on binding in the presence of 20 mM KCl, while at low ionic strength, MgCl2 (1 mM) increased binding and inhibited dissociation to the same extent as 10 to 20 mM KCl. Binding was abolished by pretreatment of vesicles with 0.1 M acetic acid, or with 0.1 microng/ml of trypsin. The periodic acid-Schiff-staining bands were unaffected by trypsin digestion which destroyed binding; mild digestion, which decreased binding only 50%, converted Band 3 almost completely to a membrane-bound 50,000-dalton fragment resistant to further proteolysis. These experiments suggest that attachment of spectrin to the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane results from a selective protein-protein interaction which is independent of erythrocyte actin. A direct role of the major sialoglycoprotein or Band 3 as a membrane binding site appears unlikely.  相似文献   

19.
Specific binding sites for somatostatin have been characterized in cytosolic fraction of rat intestinal mucosa by using 125I-labelled Tyr11-somatostatin and a variety of physicochemical conditions. The binding depended on time, temperature and pH, and was reversible, saturable and specific. At apparent equilibrium, the specific binding of 125I-Tyr11-somatostatin was competitively inhibited by native somatostatin in the 1 nM-4 microM concentration range. Binding studies suggested the presence of two classes of binding sites: a class with high affinity (Kd = 0.07 microM) and low capacity (4.6 pmol/mg protein) and a class with low affinity (Kd = 1.05 microM) and high capacity (277 pmol/mg protein) at 25 degrees C. Somatostatin exhibited competitive inhibition of tracer binding, while neuropeptides such as neurotensin, substance P, Leu-enkephalin, and vasoactive intestinal peptide were ineffective. The presence of somatostatin binding sites in cytosolic fraction of intestinal mucosa, together with the known occurrence of somatostatin in D-cells and nerve endings in the small intestine, strongly suggest that this peptide may be involved in the physiology and physiopathology of intestinal epithelium.  相似文献   

20.
The role of band 4.1 in the association of actin with erythrocyte membranes   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Spectrin stimulates the association of F-actin with erythrocyte inside-out vesicles. Although inside-out vesicles are nearly devoid of two of the three major cytoskeletal proteins, spectrin and actin, they retain nearly all of the cytoskeletal protein designated band 4.1. Inside-out vesicles which have been substantially depleted of band 4.1 by extraction in 1 M KCl, 0.4 M urea and then reconstituted with spectrin show a markedly diminished ability to bind actin by comparison with vesicles containing normal amounts of band 4.1. This diminution is not due to an impaired ability of the vesicles to bind spectrin. Addition of purified band 4.1 to vesicles either before or after they have been reconstituted with spectrin restores their actin binding capacity to near normal levels as does addition of a spectrin-band 4.1 complex prepared by sucrose gradient centrifugation. Band 4.1 bound to vesicles in the absence of added spectrin has no effect on actin binding. Our results suggest that a spectrin band 4.1 complex is responsible for binding actin to erythrocyte membranes.  相似文献   

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