scholarly journals Identification and properties of renal mineralocorticoid receptors in relation to glucocorticoid binders in rat liver and kidney

1976 ◽  
Vol 154 (3) ◽  
pp. 567-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
M K Agarwal

The binding of the natural mineralocorticoid aldosterone and the glucocorticoid corticosterone to macromolecules in rat liver and kidney cytoplasmic fractions was compared by various chromatographic procedures. Equilibration of kidney cytosol with 10nM-aldosterone, either alone or in the presence of a competing steroid, was ideal for ionexchange chromatography of DEAE-cellulose DE-52, and revealed the presence of four sorts of binding components. One of these, eluted in the 0.001M-phosphate pre-wash, and another, less abundant, forming a peak at 0.006M-phosphate, did not bind corticosterone at equimolar concentrations, and appear to constitute the mineralocorticoid-specific ‘MR‘ receptor in rat kidney. They could not be detected in the liver. Radioactivity eluted in the 0.02 and 0.06M-phosphate regions on DEAE-cellulose DE-52 appears to be due to [3H]aldosterone binding to glucocorticoid-specific ‘GR’ receptors and to transcortin respectively, since labelling was greater with corticosterone even at 10 nM than with the mineralocorticoid at 100nM and since [14C]corticosterone bound to blood serum transcortin was always co-chromatographed in the 0.06M-phosphate region. These two components appear to be identical with those in the liver and could be labelled maximally only by 100nM-corticosterone. The separation between specific mineralo- and glucocorticoid-binding species was less clear when chromatography was attempted on DEAE-Sephadex A-50 columns, possibly because of disaggregation into subunits in the presence of the high KC1 concentrations required for elution. Competitive binding followed by filtration through Sephadex G-200 gel indicated that cellular MR binders, unlike GR receptors, exist mostly as high-molecular-weight aggregates, although both appear to exhibit a comparable monomeric molecular weight of approx. 67000.

1982 ◽  
Vol 37 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 308-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mostafa N. Abdel-Halim ◽  
S. Y. K. Yousufzai

Abstract Acetyl CoA Carboxylase, Protein Inhibitor, Rat Liver A high molecular weight protein (approximately 1.5-2 × 106 daltons) has been found in rat liv­ er cytosol to inhibit acetyl CoA carboxylase activity. The protein inhibitor was purified by am­ monium sulfate precipitation, DEAE-cellulose chromatography and gel filtration. The inacti­ vation of the carboxylase is not attributable to either phosphorylation of the enzyme or to action on substrates or cofactors of the reaction. The activity of the inhibitor is destroyed by heating to 55 °C for 5 min, by treatment with trypsin, or by increasing bovine serum albumin in the reaction mixture. Hence it appears that the inhibitor is a regulatory protein that acts directly on acetyl CoA carboxylase.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (24) ◽  
pp. 4835-4843 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeanne V. Samsonova ◽  
Anastasia D. Chadina ◽  
Alexander P. Osipov ◽  
Sergey E. Kondakov

Applicability of a new and simple membrane-strip microsampling format for the analysis of human blood serum in a strip-dried form for the presence of a range of model low and high molecular weight analytes by ELISA was demonstrated.


1981 ◽  
Vol 111 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Doris M. Haverstick ◽  
Alvin H. Gold

1975 ◽  
Vol 151 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
A G McLennan ◽  
H M Keir

Two DNA polymerases of high molecular weight, pol A (mol.wt. 190 000) and pol B (mol.wt. 240 ooo), have been purified 6300-fold and 1600-fold respectively from an extramitochondrial supernatant of a bleached strain of Euglena gracilis. They have very similar requirements when assayed with an ‘activated’-DNA primer-template [the optimum conditions of pH and ionic (K+ and Mn2+) composition being 7.2, 25 mM and 0.2 mM respectively]. 0.2 mM-Mn2+ was about 1.5-2-fold as effective as 2 mM-Mg2+, owing to substrate activation by deoxyribonucleoside 5′-triphosphates in the presence of Mn2+. Km values for the triphosphates in the absence of activation were about 10(-6)M with Mn2+ and 8 × 10(-6) M with Mg2+ for both enzymes. They were inhibited to the same extent by N-ethylmaleimide, novobiocin and o-phenanthroline, but differed in their chromatographic behaviour on DEAE-cellulose and in their electrophoretic mobilities on polyacrylamide gel. No evidence was found for the existence in these cells of a DNA polymerase of low molecular weight, but there were indications that a third enzyme of high molecular weight might exist.


2001 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-120
Author(s):  
P. Balke Jacobsen ◽  
I. Oulie ◽  
C. Christiansen ◽  
T. Skotland

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