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  2. Renal aldosterone receptors: studies with (3H)aldosterone and the anti-mineralocorticoid (3H)spirolactone (SC-26304)

Renal aldosterone receptors: studies with (3H)aldosterone and the anti-mineralocorticoid (3H)spirolactone (SC-26304)

  • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1974 Apr;71(4):1431-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.71.4.1431.
D Marver J Stewart J W Funder D Feldman I S Edelman
Abstract

In vivo, a spirolactone (SC-26304) inhibited the effects of aldosterone on urinary K(+):Na(+) ratios and the binding of [(3)H]aldosterone to renal cytoplasmic and nuclear receptors. Cytoplasmic binding of [(3)H]aldosterone and [(3)H]spirolactone (SC-26304) was similar in magnitude and involved the same set of sites. Under three sets of conditions-(i) in the intact rat, (ii) in kidney slices, and (iii) in reconstitution studies (mixing prelabeled cytoplasm with either purified renal nuclei or chromatin), [(3)H]spirolactone (SC-26304) did not yield specific nuclear complexes in contrast to the reproducible generation of these complexes with [(3)H]aldosterone. In glycerol density gradients, cytoplasmic [(3)H]aldosterone receptor complexes sedimented at 8.5 S and 4 S in low concentrations of salt and at 4.5 S in high concentrations of salt. Cytoplasmic [(3)H]spirolactone (SC-26304) receptor complexes sedimented at 3 S in low concentrations of salt and 4 S in high concentrations of salt. These results are discussed in terms of an allosteric model of the receptor system.

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