Abstract
Glucocorticoid-sensitive L-cells were cultured for 18 h in the presence of [32P]orthophosphate and steroid-binding proteins of cytosol were separated by affinity chromatography and analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing. Cytosol contains a major phosphoprotein of Mr = 92,000 and a minor phosphoprotein of Mr = 100,000, both of which bind glucocorticoids in a stereospecific, high affinity manner and have the same Mr as glucocorticoid receptor species that have been covalently labeled with the site-specific affinity ligand [3H] 9 alpha-fluoro-16-methyl-11 beta,17 alpha,21-trihydroxypregna-1, 4-diene-3,20-dione 21-mesylate. Cytosol from 32P-labeled, glucocorticoid-resistant L-cells possessing 5% of the steroid-binding capacity of sensitive cells contains very little of the Mr = 92,000 phosphoprotein and none of the Mr = 100,000 phosphoprotein. These observations provide strong evidence that the glucocorticoid receptor is phosphorylated by intact L-cells. The Mr = 92,000 protein is phosphorylated on serine and it can be resolved into two species using isoelectric focusing, consistent with the proposal that there is more than 1 phosphorylated serine/steroid-binding unit. The glucocorticoid-resistant L-cell line produces a unique phosphoprotein of Mr = 104,000 that is recovered in variable amounts after affinity chromatography. It is not known whether this phosphoprotein is a separate gene product or whether it represents a precursor with weak steroid-binding activity that is not cleaved in the resistant cell to the high affinity, Mr = 92,000 mature receptor form.
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