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. 1987 Oct 8;926(1):40-53.
doi: 10.1016/0304-4165(87)90180-2.

Purification and partial characterization of a corticosteroid-binding globulin from hamster serum

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Purification and partial characterization of a corticosteroid-binding globulin from hamster serum

G O Gray et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

Our objective was to characterize and purify the corticosteroid-binding proteins in hamster pregnancy serum. When [3H]cortisol-labeled pregnancy and proestrous serum were subjected to native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, a single peak of specific steroid-binding activity was detected in each, with identical electrophoretic mobility. The steroid-binding affinity (Ka = 1.07.10(8) M-1 for cortisol) is typical of corticosteroid-binding globulin from other species, but the steroid-binding specificity (cortisol greater than testosterone greater than progesterone) is not. An ultraviolet photoaffinity-labeling protocol was developed using 17 beta-hydroxy-4,6-[1,2-3H]androstadiene-3-one ([3H]androstadienolone), permitting analysis of ultraviolet photoaffinity-labeled proestrous and pregnancy serum by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and fluorography. Both sera contained the same labeled protein species. Corticosteroid-binding globulin was purified from pregnancy serum by DEAE-cellulose chromatography followed by steroid affinity chromatography on androstadienolone-17 beta-hemisuccinate-ethylenediamine-AffiGel 10. The purified protein (Mr = 62,250; pI = 3.95; n = 1; Stokes radius = 3.5; S = 4-5) was determined to be a glycoprotein. When analyzed by gel filtration and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, purified corticosteroid-binding globulin behaved the same as in unfractionated serum, and when ultraviolet photoaffinity-labeled with [3H]androstadienolone, purified corticosteroid-binding globulin produced the same fluorogram spot pattern seen in unfractionated serum. A specific corticosteroid-binding globulin antiserum was raised in rabbits, and this antiserum reacted with a single spot in Western blots of unfractionated serum. Thus, hamster pregnancy serum was determined to have one corticosteroid-binding protein. This protein is identical to the corticosteroid-binding globulin found in proestrous serum, with a higher titer in pregnancy serum. No other steroid-binding component is observed in hamster serum.

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