Abstract

Radioiodinated bovine serum albumin conjugated to progesterone was used as a probe to examine binding parameters of steroids to membrane preparations from rat brain tissue. The binding of 11 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone-11-hemisuccinate-125I-bovine serum albumin conjugate reached saturation after 30 min of incubation at 5 degrees C. Several bovine serum albumin-conjugated steroids were then tested for competition displacement studies. Among these steroid conjugates, the bovine serum albumin conjugate at position 3 of progesterone had the highest affinity, with an estimated inhibition constant of 28.5 +/- 2.1 nM (n = 3), whereas bovine serum albumin itself and the 17 beta-estradiol 6-(O-carboxy-methyl)oxime-bovine serum albumin conjugate showed no specific displacement. In addition, the binding sites were localized in an axolemma-enriched fraction of rat brainstem. Specific binding was obtained in tissues from cerebral cortex, brainstem, cerebellum, corpus striatum, and hypothalamus, but little or no binding occurred in uterus, ovary, liver, and spleen. The present data indicate that progesterone-125I-bovine serum albumin conjugate can be used as a ligand to study progesterone-membrane receptor interactions.

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