Abstract

A new antiestrogen affinity ligand for the covalent labeling of estrogen receptors, [3H]desmethylnafoxidine aziridine, has been used to investigate the salt- and temperature-independent formation of DNA-binding estrogen receptor forms from untransformed (300 kilodaltons) receptor. Calf uterine estrogen receptor proteins labeled with [3H]estradiol or [3H]desmethylnafoxidine aziridine were quantitatively transformed (greater than 90%) to their DNA-binding configuration in low ionic strength buffers by brief exposure to 3 M urea at 0 C. The urea effect was hormone-dependent and partially reversible. The transformed receptors were purified (ca 250-fold) by affinity chromatography on single-stranded DNA-agarose in the continued presence of 3 M urea to prevent transformation reversal. Scatchard analyses revealed a single class of high affinity radioligand binding sites (Kd = 0.34 nM) unchanged by urea-induced transformation and purification. The DNA-binding receptor form labeled with [3H]desmethylnafoxidine aziridine was stable as a probable dimer in 3 M urea with 0.4 M KCl and displayed no evidence of size (Stokes radius 7.3 to 7.5 nm; 4.2 to 4.3 S; Mr = 136,800) heterogeneity. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis indicated the presence of an intact 67 kDa steroid-binding receptor subunit. Reverse-phase chromatography of the covalently labeled receptor on C4 and phenyl stationary phases revealed no evidence of structural heterogeneity. The surface charge of the estrogen- and antiestrogen-receptor complexes, however, was distinctly different in both the presence and absence of 3 M urea. Thus, exposure to urea was an effective salt- and temperature-independent means for achieving the complete transformation of receptor to its stable DNA-binding dimer configuration. The ligand-induced differences in receptor surface charge and the urea effects on DNA-binding (but not hormone-binding) suggest that both electrostatic and hydrophobic or hydrogen bonding receptor domains are influenced by ligand binding.

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