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1.
Hydrophobic interaction chromatography has been used to demonstrate an increase in the surface hydrophobicity of [3H]triamcinolone acetonide ([3H]TA)-labeled type II receptors in mouse brain cytosol following transformation of these receptor complexes to the activated DNA-binding form. After removing unbound [3H]TA and molybdate (which prevents activation) by gel filtration, [3H]TA-type II receptors were activated by incubation at 22 degrees C for 20 min. Gel filtration was then used to remove newly dissociated steroid and to readjust the molybdate and/or KCl concentration. Unactivated and activated receptors were then added to propyl, butyl, pentyl, hexyl, octyl, decyl, and dodecyl alkyl agarose, phenyl agarose, or unmodified agarose columns equilibrated and eluted with buffers of various molybdate and KCl concentrations and/or other additions, including glycerol, ethylene glycol, and urea. Under high-salt conditions, activated receptors were retained longer than unactivated receptors run on butyl, pentyl, hexyl, and phenyl agaroses. With the longer alkyl chain columns, essentially none of the [3H]TA was eluted in association with receptor macromolecules. Removal of the remaining steroid required receptor denaturation with urea. Under low-salt conditions, both receptor forms were retained more avidly on all alkyl agarose columns; however, on phenyl agarose only activated receptors displayed this increased retention. Further studies revealed that optimal separation and subsequent recovery of unactivated and activated [3H]TA-type II receptor complexes were achieved on pentyl agarose columns equilibrated and eluted with buffers containing 50 mM molybdate and 600-1,200 mM KCl.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The effect of sodium molybdate on the stability and activation of the glucocorticoid receptor from chick and rat thymus were investigated. Molybdate, at a concentration range of 1–10 mM, blocked denaturation of the cytosol receptor by elevated (25 and 37°C) temperatures. This effect could be observed only with the aggregated (low-salt) form of the receptor. Molybdate also inhibited transformation of the receptor-hormone complex to the DNA-binding state which occurs either with incubation at 25°C or with salt treatment. The inhibitory effect of molybdate could be observed only on the non-activated receptor; nuclear- and DNA-binding of the activated receptor was not significantly changed by molybdate. Both effects were concentration-dependent. Molybdate had no effect on the activation of the partially purified glucocorticoid receptor. Molybdate effect was also examined using intact lymphocytes. Sodium molybdate had no effect either on the steroid binding of whole cells or on the nuclear transfer of the hormone-receptor complex. While the mechanism of molybdate action remains unknown the results of experiments on purified receptor suggest that molybdate does not act directly on the receptor molecule; rather through some cytosol factor(s). However, these effects could only be seen in cell-free experiments, and not during the conditions of the living cell.  相似文献   

3.
Glucocorticoid receptor in rat liver cytosol is inactivated (rendered unable to bind steroid) by incubation with calf intestine alkaline phosphatase or highly purified rabbit muscle phosphoprotein phosphatase (phosphorylase phosphate, protein phosphatase C). The receptor is inactivated by both enzymes even when 10 mM sodium molybdate is present. Receptors that are inactivated by phosphatases in the presence of molybdate can be reactivated to the steroid-binding state by addition of dithiothreitol, but receptors that are inactivated in the absence of molybdate cannot be reactivated. These observations suggest that dephosphorylation leads to oxidation of a moiety (-SH) on the receptor that is required for steroid binding. Molybdate apparently preserves the receptor in a form such that reduction returns the receptor to the steroid binding state. We would propose that molybdate may act by complexing with sulfur groups on the receptor.  相似文献   

4.
The binding of [3H]aldosterone in the chick intestine cytosol was analyzed in terms of affinity and specificity. In this tissue, aldosterone binds to the mineralocorticosteroid receptor, with a high affinity (Kd approximately 0.3 nM) and low capacity (approximately 50 fmol/mg protein), and to the glucocorticosteroid receptor. The selective labeling of the mineralocorticosteroid receptor was achieved by incubating the cytosol with [3H]aldosterone in the presence of RU 486. This synthetic steroid completely inhibited the binding of [3H]aldosterone to the glucocorticosteroid receptor and did not bind to the mineralocorticosteroid receptor. The oligomeric structure of the mineralocorticosteroid receptor was studied by using BF4, a monoclonal antibody which reacts with the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp 90), a nonhormone-binding component of nontransformed steroid receptors. The mineralocorticosteroid receptor sedimented at 8.5 +/- 0.4 S (n = 8) in a 15-40% glycerol gradient. This peak was shifted to 11.2 +/- 0.6 S (n = 5) after incubation with BF4, indicating that, in the cytosol, hsp 90 was associated with the mineralocorticosteroid receptor. Dissociation of the complex was observed on gradients containing 0.4 M KCl, as judged by the absence of displacement by BF4 of the 4.3 +/- 0.4 S (n = 10) peak. The effect of molybdate and tungstate ions, and of dimethyl pimelimidate, an irreversible cross-linking agent, on the stability of the hsp 90-receptor complex was investigated. Complexes recovered in the presence of 20 mM molybdate ions dissociated on gradients containing 0.4 M KCl (5.2 +/- 0.6 S (n = 4), whereas complexes prepared in the presence of 20 mM tungstate ions sedimented at 8.5 +/- 0.4 S (n = 7). Similarly, complexes prepared in the presence of molybdate ions dissociated during high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) gel filtration analysis performed in 0.4 M KCl (RS (Stokes radius) = 3.9 +/- 0.5 nm (n = 3) versus 7.3 +/- 0.2 nm (n = 3) in the presence of 20 mM molybdate ions), whereas complexes prepared in the presence of tungstate ions did not dissociate (RS = 6.9 +/- 0.2 nm (n = 3]. As observed for the tungstate-stabilized receptor, the cross-linked receptor dissociated neither on gradient containing 0.4 M KCl (9.5 +/- 0.1 S (n = 3] nor during HPLC performed in 0.4 M KCl (RS = 6.5 +/- 0.3 (n = 4]. Furthermore, the cross-linked receptor was more resistant to the inactivating effect of urea on aldosterone binding than the noncross-linked receptor prepared in the presence of either molybdate or tungstate ions.  相似文献   

5.
When freshly prepared glucocorticoid-receptor complex from rat liver cytosol was incubated at 23 degrees C in the presence of sodium molybdate, its subsequent binding to isolated nuclei, DNA-cellulose and ATP-Sepharose was blocked. In addition, binding to these acceptors by cytosol receptor complex fractionated with (NH4)2SO4 was also blocked by incubation of the complexes with 50 mM-sodium molybdate. However, molybdate had no effect on the binding of activated receptor complexes to ATP-Sepharose. Molybdate was also effective in extracting the nuclear- and DNA-cellulose-bound glucocorticoid-receptor complexes in a dose-dependent manner. Molybdate appears to exert its effects directly on the receptor by interacting with both non-activated and activated receptor forms.  相似文献   

6.
In structure and general mode of action, the Ah receptor is very similar to the receptors for steroid hormones. Molybdate previously has been shown to be highly effective at preserving ligand-binding function in steroid receptors during their exposure to elevated temperature or high ionic strength and at stabilizing steroid receptors as high molecular weight oligomeric complexes. Since such stabilization by molybdate can be very useful during characterization and purification of receptors, we tested the effects of molybdate on the Ah receptor to determine if the Ah receptor, like the receptors for steroid hormones, might be stabilized. In hepatic cytosols from C57BL/6N mice and Sprague-Dawley rats, molybdate concentrations up to 30 mM in homogenizing and analysis buffers did not alter the concentration of specific Ah receptor sites detected by binding of [3H]2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin. However, inclusion of 20 mM molybdate in the homogenizing buffer did significantly protect unliganded Ah receptor from thermal inactivation at 20 degrees C and from KCl-induced loss of ligand-binding ability. In accord with previous reports, 20 mM molybdate in homogenizing and analysis buffers greatly increased the concentration of detectable glucocorticoid receptor in rat hepatic cytosol and estrogen receptor in rat uterine cytosol. Exposure to 0.4 M KC1 caused the glucocorticoid receptor from rat liver to shift sedimentation from approximately equal to 8 S to approximately equal to 4 S and caused a severe loss of specific glucocorticoid binding. Presence of 20 mM molybdate stabilized the glucocorticoid receptor as a single discrete peak sedimenting at approximately equal to 8 S. In contrast, the Ah receptor from rat liver exposed to 0.4 M KC1 in the presence of molybdate sedimented as biphasic peaks; one peak (approximately equal to 9.5 S) corresponded to the form of Ah receptor observed at low ionic strength, while the other peak (approximately equal to 5.5 S) corresponded to the form of Ah receptor seen in cytosol treated with 0.4 M KC1 in the absence of molybdate. Addition of heparin to hepatic cytosols from mice or rats shifted sedimentation of Ah receptor from approximately equal to 9.5 S to approximately equal to 5.5 S. Molybdate, again, provided stabilization in the approximately equal to 9.5 S form, but only for about one-half the total Ah receptor content in both rat and mouse hepatic cytosols. In sum, molybdate is far less effective at stabilizing rodent Ah receptors than it is at stabilizing steroid receptors in the same species.  相似文献   

7.
Glucocorticoid-receptor complexes in rat thymus cytosol were characterized by gel-filtration and ion-exchange chromatography and by other procedures. Two forms of non-transformed complex were identified at low ionic strength in the presence of molybdate, with Stokes radii of approx. 8 and 6 nm. The 8 nm molybdate-stabilized form could be converted to the 6 nm form by chromatography on Sephacryl S-300 or Lipidex 1000 or by incubation with charcoal or phospholipase C, but not by chromatography on Sephadex G-25. The dissociation rate of the complex was reduced by treatment with charcoal or Lipidex 1000, but none of the treatments caused transformation to a DNA-binding form. Transformation of the complex, by exposure to elevated temperature or ionic strength in the absence of molybdate, resulted in the appearance of a different 6 nm form, distinguished by an increased affinity for DNA-cellulose and a reduced affinity for DEAE-cellulose. These results suggest that receptor transformation is preceded by structural changes associated with the loss of a lipid factor from the complex. Non-polar steroid antagonists, and lipophilic compounds such as phenothiazines, were found to bind to secondary, hydrophobic sites on the receptor and to exert allosteric effects on the primary steroid-binding site; these and other observations emphasize the importance of hydrophobic interactions as determinants of the structure and properties of glucocorticoid receptors.  相似文献   

8.
The chick oviduct cytosol progesterone receptor can be transformed to a small form (Rs = 21A, S20,w:2.9) denoted "mero-receptor" by incubation in the presence of Ca2+ [8]. In the molybdate-free cytosol all the progestin binding components could be completely transformed to mero-form by 1 h treatment with 100 mM Ca2+ at 0 degrees C. If EDTA was secondarily added, the ligand was rapidly released. If molybdate (20 mM) containing cytosol was incubated with Ca2+, no radioactivity was found in the meroposition on the Agarose A 0.5 m column, but the bound steroid sedimented at 2.9 S in sucrose gradients containing Ca2+ (and no molybdate). When 20 nM molybdate was added to cytosol containing receptor activated by 0.3 M KCl, complete mero-transformation by Ca2+ was obtained also by the gel filtration criterion, indicating that molybdate does not inhibit the mero-transforming factor. Ligand-free progesterone receptor could also be completely converted to mero-form by endogenous cytosolic transforming factor and calcium. The transforming factor was completely inactivated, when cytosol was run through Agarose A 0.5 m gel. Mero-transformation was found to be irreversible. The purified progesterone receptor subunit 110 K (B) was partially converted to smaller forms by calcium alone (100 mM, 0 degrees C, 1 h) whereas addition of a small amount of cytosol allowed complete conversion to mero-form.  相似文献   

9.
Cytosolic aldosterone-protein complexes are isolated from rat kidney slices after incubation with [3H]aldosterone and dexamethasone. Activated and unactivated forms of the complex are characterized by gel electrophoresis and hydroxyapatite chromatography after incubation at 4 degrees C and 25 degrees C respectively. It is found that the activated form reaches a maximum after 30 min at 25 degrees C and can be separated as an homogeneous peak by electrophoresis. Intermediate forms can also be identified. In the presence of 10 mM ATP, activation immediately occurs at 4 degrees C and is almost complete. In the presence of 10 mM molybdate, the activation is strongly enhanced and the increase in activated form may be about fifteen-fold whether molybdate is added during kidney homogenization or just before incubation at 25 degrees C. On the other hand molybdate reduces to one third the binding of the aldosterone-receptor complexes to nuclei. In the presence of the steroid RU 26988 which is a pure glucocorticoid, experiments done on aldosterone-receptors complexes and their binding to nuclei are confirmed. This proves that aldosterone is specific for mineralocorticoid sites. The general pattern of the mineralocorticoid receptor activation is discussed and its resemblance to the case of other steroid hormones is emphasized.  相似文献   

10.
Recently we reported that adding molybdate to crude steroid-free cytosol at 0°C results in a dose-dependent reduction in the binding of [3H]aldosterone ([3H]ALDO), to Type I adrenocorticosteroid receptors. In the experiments outlined here, we found that addition of molybdate to steroid-free brain cytosol produces a 30–50% increase in the subsequently measured maximal specific binding capacity (B MAX) of [3H]ALDO-Type I receptors if the cytosol is subjected to Sephadex G-25 gel filtration prior to steroid addition. These manipulations were found to have no effect on the equilibrium dissociation constant (K d) of the receptors. In contrast, when gel filtration of steroid-free cytosol was performed in the absence of molybdate, there was a 2-fold increase in the Kd and over a 50% reduction in the subsequently measuredB MAX of [3H]ALDO-Type I receptors. When molybdate was added to this steroid-free cytosol immediately following gel filtration, there was no reduction (or increase) in Type I receptor [3H]ALDO binding capacity compared with nongel-filtered controls. The addition of as little as 2 mM molybdate to crude steroid-free cytosol was found to stabilize the binding capacity of Type I receptors during exposure to 22°C incubations; however, when gel-filtered steroid-free cytosol was exposed to these conditions at least 10 mM molybdate was required to stabilize Type I receptor binding capacity. Adding the sulfhydryl reducing reagent, dithiothreitol, to the various steroid-free cytosols had little effect on [3H]ALDO-Type I receptor binding. The effects of molybdate, revealed in this study, on Type I receptors in brain cytosol subjected to gel filtration are clearly different from those seen with receptors in crude cytosol preparations, as well as from those reported in the literature for other steroid receptors. Possible mechanisms of action of molybdate on unoccupied Type I receptors in crude and gel-filtered cytosol are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Rat liver cytosolic glucocorticoid receptor labelled with [3H] dexamethasone and stabilized with molybdate was bound to heparin-ultrogel and eluted with NaCl or heparin as a single peak of radioactivity. After heat exposure of cytosol, two steroid receptor complexes could be separated by NaCl or heparin. Characterization of the two forms was performed by means of affinity towards isolated nuclei, ssucrose gradient centrigugation and gel exclusion high performance liquid chromatography. The results presented here suggest that the two forms eluted from heparin-agarose correspond to the untransformed and transformed states of the glucocorticoid receptor complex. Taken together, these observations argue in favor of heparin-ultrogel as a suitable procedure to study the mechanism of glucocorticoid-receptor transformation.  相似文献   

12.
Purification of the mineralcorticoid receptor is a particularly challenging problem. This receptor is present in target tissues at concentrations lower and is less stable than any other steroid receptor. Addition of molybdate ions (20 mM) to rat kidney cytosol enhances stability of mineralcorticoid-specific binding sites: the inactivation rate at 0 degrees C decreases from 7.2 to 1.7% per hour in the absence of aldosterone, and from 1.8 to 0.3% per hour in the presence of hormone. Rates of inactivation in the presence of molybdate are thus compatible with purification procedures. Also, the corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) is an important contaminating component of kidney cytosol because it cannot be specifically blocked preliminarily to affinity chromatography. We show that when kidney cytosol is incubated with heparin covalently linked to Sepharose (Sepharose-heparin), after 30 min at 0 degrees C more than 80% of the mineralcorticoid-specific binding sites interact strongly with Sepharose-heparin while CBG is not bound at all. The mineralcorticoid-specific binding sites can be recovered from Sepharose-heparin by washing with heparin (2 mg/ml; recovery up to 90%), KCl (0.3 M; recovery up to 90%); and, less efficiently, with total liver RNA (2 mg/ml; recovery up to 55%) and dextran sulfate (2 mg/ml; recovery up to 40%); little or no recovery is achieved with chondroitin sulfate, sonicated DNA, pyridoxal-5-phosphate, dextran, d-glucosamine and d-glucuronic acid. With demonstration that also the mineral-corticoid receptor binds to heparin, this property has become a general hallmark of steroid receptors. If the "heparin" binding site of steroid receptors is of physiological significance it remains to be established. By application of the newly found property of the mineralcorticoid receptor, an overall 10-fold purified, CBG-free preparation of this receptor can be obtained from kidney cytosol with a single chromatography on Sepharose-heparin.  相似文献   

13.
The inactivation of glucocorticoid receptors that occurs when cytosol is heated at 25 degrees C is blocked reversibly by molybdate and slowed by some other phosphatase inhibitors such as fluoride and glucose 1-phosphate. Molybdate is also capable of preventing nonenzymatic inactivation of unbound receptors caused by exposure to salt or precipitation with ammonium sulfate at 0 degrees C. Inactivation of unbound receptors caused by Sephadex G-50 gel filtration is prevented by all three inhibitors. Both molybdate and tungstate block temperature-dependent transformation of glucocorticoid.receptor complexes to the DNA-binding state, where fluoride and glucose 1-phosphate have no effect. Transformation brought about at 0 degrees C by salt, ammonium sulfate precipitation, or gel filtration is also blocked by both molybdate and tungstate. Tungstate differs from molybdate in that it has little or no effect on receptor inactivation. Fluoride and glucose 1-phosphate do not inhibit transformation. These observations support the proposal that molybdate and tungstate are interacting through a reversible association with the glucocorticoid receptor itself. We propose that they may act by forming a complex with a phosphate moiety on the receptor.  相似文献   

14.
The non-transformed, molybdate-stabilized chick oviduct cytosol progesterone receptor was purified approx. 7000-fold using biospecific affinity resin (NADAC-Sepharose), DEAE-Sephacel chromatography and gel filtration on Bio-Gel A-0.5m agarose. The purified preparation contained progesterone receptor which sedimented as a 7.9S molecule, had a Stokes' radius of 7.5 nm, was composed of three major peptides corresponding to Mr 108,000, 90,000 and 79,000. Upon removal of molybdate, the purified [3H]progesterone-receptor complex could be transformed from the 8S form to a 4S form by exposure to 23 degrees C or by an incubation with 10 mM ATP at 0 degrees C. The purified thermally transformed receptor could be adsorbed to columns of ATP-Sepharose. No cytosol factor(s) appeared to be required for the 8S to 4S transformation of purified receptor or for its subsequent binding to ATP-Sepharose. Incubation of purified non-transformed receptor preparation with [gamma-32P]ATP and cAMP-dependent protein kinase led to incorporation of radioactivity in all the three major peptides at serine residues. The results of this study show for the first time that purified 8S progesterone receptor can be phosphorylated in vitro by a cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and that it can be transformed to a 4S form by 0 degrees C incubation with 10 mM ATP.  相似文献   

15.
The molybdate-stabilized GHRC was isolated from rat liver cytosol with a 9000-fold purification and 46% yield. The major purification step was achieved using an affinity matrix consisting of an agarose support coupled to a dexamethasone ligand via an aliphatic spacer arm. Spacer arms containing disulfide bridges were found to be unsuitable due to their instability in cytosol. To reduce the non-specific binding properties of the affinity matrix, underivatized amino groups were acetylated, since the receptor was found to bind avidly to such groups thus evading elution by the ligand. Sodium molybdate present during biospecific elution from the gel stabilized the steroid-binding activity of the receptor. The use of denaturing and sulfhydryl modifying reagents (NaSCN, DMSO, Mersalyl) during elution led to partial or complete irreversible loss of steroid-binding activity of the unoccupied receptor. Efficient biospecific elution occurred at competing concentration of high affinity steroid in the presence of sodium molybdate. The ligand specific eluate was further purified by DEAE-Sephacel chromatography resulting in additional purification of 3.2-fold. The GHRC eluted from the DEAE-Sephacel column at a salt concentration characteristic of the untransformed GHRC. Molybdate was removed from the purified untransformed GHRC in the ligand eluate by DEAE-Sephacel chromatography in the absence of molybdate, for subsequent heat transformation.  相似文献   

16.
Glucocorticoid-receptor complexes in rat thymus cytosol were characterized by gel-filtration chromatography on Agarose A-1.5 m and Sephacryl S-300. Two forms of non-transformed complex were identified at low ionic strength in the presence of molybdate, with Stokes radii of approx 8 nm and 6 nm. The 8 nm molybdate-stabilized form could be converted to the 6 nm form by chromatography on Sephacryl S-300 or Lipidex 1000 or by incubation with dextran-charcoal or phospholipase C, but not by chromatography on Sephadex G-25; none of the treatments promoted receptor transformation. It is suggested that the change in Stokes radius from 8 to 6 nm results from the removal of a lipid factor responsible for maintaining the complex in the 8 nm form.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Treatment of intact GH1 cells with sodium molybdate inhibits the subsequent rate of nuclear accumulation of hormone-occupied glucocorticoid and estrogen receptors. Cells were incubated at 23 degrees C for 1 h with 30 mM molybdate and then for up to 30 min with [3H]triamcinolone acetonide or [3H]estradiol in the continued presence of molybdate. Although molybdate did not affect the rate of receptor occupancy with either steroid, cells treated with molybdate had more occupied cytosolic and fewer occupied nuclear receptors than control cells. For the glucocorticoid receptor, cells treated with molybdate had more 10 S and fewer 4 S cytosolic receptors than control cells. In low salt cytosol molybdate inhibits the temperature-mediated subunit dissociation of occupied 10 S glucocorticoid receptor. These results suggest that a hormone-mediated dissociation of an intracellular 10 S oligomeric glucocorticoid receptor form to its 4 S subunits is required prior to accumulation of occupied receptors in the nuclear fraction. In cells incubated at 37 degrees C for 1 h or longer with [3H]triamcinolone acetonide, molybdate shifts the steady state intracellular distribution of receptor toward the 10 S cytosolic receptor form, consistent with the interpretation that molybdate affects the rapidly exchanging subunit equilibrium between the 10 S and 4 S cytosolic forms by slowing the rate of 10 S receptor dissociation. Molybdate prevents loss of glucocorticoid-occupied 10 S but not 4 S receptors in heated cytosol by stabilizing the relatively protease-resistant 10 S receptor. Since molybdate stabilizes 10 S oligomeric steroid receptors in vitro, the effects of molybdate on nuclear accumulation of occupied receptors in intact cells support the intracellular existence and physiological relevance of 10 S glucocorticoid and estrogen receptors. These results support a general model for steroid receptor activation in which binding of hormone promotes dissociation of intracellular 8-10 S oligomeric receptors to their DNA-binding subunits.  相似文献   

19.
When sodium molybdate is added at a final concentration of 20 mM, additional 85 and 4S progesterone (3 H-R5020) receptor can be detected in the cytosols from a number of human breast cancers. Additional estrogen receptor also could be measured in some cytosols, and a quantitative temperaturedependent conversion of 8S to 4S binding molecules achieved. Sodium molybdate also prevented the loss of binding activity that occurred when cytosols were incubated at 30° in the absence of added estradiol. In addition to increasing the amount of progesterone receptor, and to a lesser extent estrogen receptor that may be detected, elucidation of the mechanism by which this salt stabilized receptors should contribute to further understanding of how cytosol steroid receptor content and function is regulated.  相似文献   

20.
We have examined the influence of urea on the properties of the rat liver glucocorticoid receptor (GR). A 1-h incubation of hepatic cytosol with 1-3 M urea at 0 or at 23 degrees C caused a progressive decrease in the steroid binding efficiency of GR. Urea treatment of cytosol incubated with 20 nM [3H]triamcinolone acetonide caused transformation of glucocorticoid-receptor complexes (GRc) and resulted in an increase in the binding of GRc to DNA-cellulose and ATP-Sepharose. The transforming effect was maximal with 2.5 M urea at 0 degrees C for 1 h, and it caused a shift in the rate of sedimentation of the 9 S untransformed GRc to a 4 S form, similar to that observed upon incubation of the cytosol GRc at 23 degrees C. This 9 to 4 S transformation could also be observed in the presence of Na2MoO4. The Stokes radii of the GRc eluted from a Bio-Gel-A-0.5m agarose column were determined to be 5.9 and 4.9 nm in the absence and presence of 2.5 M urea. The aqueous two-phase partitioning analysis revealed a significant change in surface properties of GR following urea treatment; the observed partition coefficient values (cpm upper phase/bottom phase) were 0.022, 0.208, and 0.60 for GRc, GRc + 23 degrees C, and GRc + 2.5 M urea, respectively. Furthermore, the urea treatment rendered the GRc less negatively charged, forcing their appearance in the flow-through fractions of a DEAE-Sephacel column. These results suggest that urea is a potent in vitro modulator of the physicochemical behavior of GR, influencing both the steroid binding and the process of receptor transformation.  相似文献   

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