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Comparative Study
. 1978 Jun 22;41(1):15-40.
doi: 10.1007/BF01873338.

Effect of aldosterone on incorporation of amino acids into renal medullary proteins

Comparative Study

Effect of aldosterone on incorporation of amino acids into renal medullary proteins

P Y Law et al. J Membr Biol. .

Abstract

Studies on the effects of pretreatment with aldosterone on the incorporation of 3H leucine or 3H methionine into proteins in renal slices were carried out in Joklik-modified minimal essential medium. Administration of aldosterone (2microgram/100 g body wt) to adrenalectomized rats increased 3H leucine incorporation into trichloroacetic acid insoluble fractions of crude homogenates of cortical slices by 15.5 +/- 0.4% and of medullary slices by 53.5 +/- 1.3%. No increase in isotope incorporation was observed in slices of renal papilla or spleen prepared from the same rats. Aldosterone had no effect on the 3H-leucine content of the trichloroacetic acid-soluble fractions of all three renal zones and the spleen. The dose of aldosterone that elicited a half-maximal increase in 3H-methionine incorporation into proteins of renal medullary slices (0.45 microgram of aldosterone/100 g body wt) was indistinguishable from that needed to elicit a halt-maximal increase in the urinary K+/Na+ ratio (0.35 microgram of aldosterone/100 g body wt). Dexamethasone, a potent glucocorticoid, at a dose of 0.8 microgram/100 g body wt did not augment 3H-leucine incorporation into renal medullary proteins but was effective at 8 microgram/100 g body wt. Spirolactone (SC-26304), a potent anti-mineralocorticoid, abolished the effect of aldosterone on amino acid incorporation into medullary proteins when administered at a 100-fold higher dosage [i.e., 80 microgram (per 100 g body wt)]. These results imply that the action of aldosterone on amino acid incorporation is mediated by the mineralocorticoid rather than the glucocorticoid pathway, presumably the mineralocorticoid receptors. Moreover, pretreatment of the rats with actinomycin D (70--80 microgram/100 g body wt) erased the effect of aldosterone (0.8 microgram/100 g body wt) on amino acid incorporation into medullary proteins. In paired experiments with 3H and 35S methionine, aldosterone (0.8 microgram/100 g body wt) increased methionine incorporation into trichloroacetic acid precipitable proteins of subcellular fractions of the renal medulla. The effect of aldosterone on incorporation of methionine into medullary cytosol proteins was analyzed further by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 8.3 in tris-glycine buffer. The gel profiles indicate that aldosterone significantly increased methionine incorporation into at least one protein (independent of the isotope) with a molecular weight of approximately 31,000. This increase was inhibited by either pretreatment of the rat with actinomycin D (70--80 microgram/100 g body wt or SC-26304 (80 microgram/100 g body wt). Dexamethasone (0.8 microgram/100 g body wt) did not increase incorporation of methinine into the medullary cytosol proteins resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.

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References

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