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    53
  • Article
    Bailly A, Savouret JF, Sallas N, Milgrom E.
    Eur J Biochem. 1978 Aug 01;88(2):623-32.
    Steroid-receptor complexes formed in concentrated cytosol at low temperature, low ionic strength and neutral pH are unable to bind to nuclei. Various procedures are known to promote their 'activation'. In the present work it is shown that an increase in temperature only enhances the rate of the reaction whereas no change in the equilibrium between activated and non-activated complexes is observed. On the contrary an increase in ionic strength or pH, as well as a removal of a low-molecular-weight inhibitor, not only accelerate the reaction but also increase the concentration of activated complexes at equilibrium. Using two steroids differing 3-fold in their affinity for the receptor, no difference was seen in the effect of the bound steroid on receptor activation. When combining various activation procedures it was observed that they acted independently of each other and additively. In all cases they retained their property of either modifying only the rate of the reaction or both its rate and equilibrium. Using changes in pH, it was also possible to induce shifts in the equilibrium between activated and non-activated complexes. After activation at pH 6.5, a first equilibrium was attained. When the pH was increased to 8 the equilibrium was displaced towards higher concentrations of activated complexes. A lowering of the pH resulted in a reversal of steroid-receptor complexes from the activated to the non-activated state. To clearly establish that this was not due to irreversible damage of the receptor, which would render it unable to bind to nuclei, it was shown that the complexes which had reverted to the non-activated state were still susceptible to activation. Regulatory events may thus exist which, for a given level of hormone and receptor, modulate the concentration of activated steroid-receptor complexes.
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