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Glucocorticoid Receptor and Effector Mechanisms: A Comparison of the Corticosensitive Mouse with the Corticoresistant Guinea Pig*
54
Citations
9
References
1979
Year
Steroid Effector SystemsGlucocorticoidGlucocorticoid ReceptorExperimental PharmacologyReproductive EndocrinologyMolecular PharmacologyAdrenal GlandNeuroendocrine MechanismSpleen Cell ResponseSteroid MetabolismHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyStress HormoneNeuropharmacologyNervous SystemEndocrinologyPharmacologyEffector MechanismsNeuroanatomyPhysiologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemCorticosensitive MouseMedicineGuinea PigEndocrine Research
In terms of steroid effector systems, one of the areas least explored is the often described species difference in sensitivity to administered glucocorticoids. We have compared a species reported to be corticosensitive (mouse) with a more corticoresistant species (guinea pig) in terms of 1) the affinity with which tritiated dexamethasone ([3H]DM) is bound in spleen cytoplasmic preparations from adrenalectomized animals, 2) the sensitivity to DM of phytohemagglutinin-treated spleen cells in vitro, measured by inhibition of tritiated thymidine incorporation, and 3) the effect of adrenalectomy 1 day before sacrifice on the spleen cell response to DM in vitro. The affinity of mouse spleen glucocorticoid receptors for [3H]DM is represented by a Kd at 4 C of ∼5 nM; in the guinea pig, the same tissue has a 20- fold lower affinity (Kd at 4 C, ∼0.1 μM). The concentrations of DM necessary for half-maximal inhibition of tritiated thymidine incorporation (mouse, 5 nM; guinea pig, 0.08 μM) closely approximate the half-maximal values for glucocorticoid receptor occupancy. Adrenalectomy the day before sacrifice does not significantly change the concentration of DM required for half-maximal inhibition, but is followed by a significant increase in the slope of the dose-response curve measured around the point of 50% inhibition. Conclusions are: 1) there is an ∼20-fold difference in affinity for [3H]DM between glucocorticoid receptors in the two species; 2) this difference in affinity is a sufficient, although not necessarily exclusive, explanation for the demonstrated differences in glucocorticoid sensitivity between the two species; 3) in both species, receptor-effector events appear closely coupled, evidenced by strikingly parallel dose-response curves; and 4) the mechanism whereby prior adrenalectomy increases the slope of the dose-response curve remains to be established.
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