Abstract

Glucocorticosteroid receptors were measured in subpopulations of human peripheral blood T cells identified by the presence of an Fc receptor for IgG (T G) or an Fc receptor for IgM (T M). T M cells are selectively depleted from the circulation by in vivo administration of glucocorticosteroids as opposed to T G cells which are relatively resistant to the lymphodepletive effects of these hormones. However, this selective lymphodepletive effect of glucocorticosteroids on T M cells could not be explained on the basis of detectable differences in intracytoplasmic glucocorticosteroid receptors in these T-cell subpopulations since T G and T M cells had quantitatively similar glucocorticosteroid receptors as well as remarkably similar dexamethasone binding affinities and dissociation constants. Hence, the strikingly different effects of glucocorticosteroids on the circulatory kinetics of T G and T M cells must be explained by mechanisms other than those at the level of the glucocorticosteroid receptor.

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