Abstract

Chromatin isolated from hypothalamic nuclei of sexually mature entire male and female sheep was linked to cellulose in u.v. light. The saturation binding of 3H-labelled oestrogen- and progesterone-receptor complexes, prepared by (NH4)2SO4 precipitation from the 105000g supernatant of hypothalamic cytosol, was then measured in vitro in 0.15m-KCl. Saturation binding was also measured after extraction of histones and masking acidic proteins. Salt + urea was observed to be more effective than guanidine hydrochloride in unmasking receptor acceptor sites, and the binding of labelled receptor complexes to dehistonized unmasked chromatin was shown to be largely resistant to 0.4m-KCl extraction. Whereas extents of receptor-complex binding were similar to published values for comparable preparations of hen oviduct chromatin, no sex-related difference was observed. However, binding of progesterone-receptor to chromatin was greater than that of oestradiol-receptor. Binding also increased more after removal of histones and masking acidic proteins, suggesting the presence of a greater number of progesterone-receptor acceptor sites in hypothalamic chromatin than of estradiol-receptor acceptor sites. The failure to demonstrate a sex-related difference in oestradiol-receptor binding to hypothalamic chromatin in vitro is discussed.

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