Abstract

The numbers of type I and type II aldosterone receptors in the kidney cytosol of adrenalectomized rats were estimated after animals were treated with various steroids, or fed with high or low potassium diets. Oestradiol and 5β-pregnane-3,20 dione, which exhibited no affinity for aldosterone receptors, did not modify the levels of type I or type II receptors. Cortisol, corticosterone, progesterone and spirolactones, which all competed with aldosterone for both types of receptor, reduced the number of type I sites, as does aldosterone itself. Steroid treatment has no appreciable effect on type II receptors. We conclude that type I receptors are modulated by steroids able to bind to aldosterone receptors and that steroid-receptor interaction is an essential step in the receptor modulation process. The effects of potassium on aldosterone receptor modulation were tested in adrenalectomized rats on hypo- or hyperkalaemic diets. No change in receptor levels was observed in the rats on a low potassium diet, but the number of type I receptors increased in animals on a high potassium diet. However, the effects of potassium on receptor modulation were of lesser magnitude than those of aldosterone agonists and antagonists.

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