Abstract
The thermodynamics of the interaction of glucocorticoids with their receptor were studied in cytosol from human lymphoblastoid cells. The rate and affinity constants of dexamethasone and cortisol between 0 degree and 25 degrees C were calculated by curve-fitting from time-course and equilibrium kinetics. The data were consistent with a simple reversible bimolecular interaction. Arrhenius and Van't Hoff plots were curvilinear for both steroids. At equilibrium, the solution for the equation delta G = delta H - T X delta S (eqn. 1) was (in kJ X mol-1) −47 = 36 − 83 (dexamethasone) and −42 = −9 − 33 (cortisol) at 0 degree C. Enthalpy and entropy changes decreased quasi-linearly with temperature such that, at 25 degrees C, the respective values were −50 = −75 + 25 and −43 = −48 + 5. Thus, for both steroids, the interaction was entropy-driven at low temperature and became entirely enthalpy-driven at 20 degrees C. Thermodynamic values for the transition state were calculated from the rate constants. For the forward reaction, eqn. (1) gave 45 = 84 − 39 (dexamethasone) and 46 = 60 − 14 (cortisol) at 0 degree C, and 44 = 24 + 20 (dexamethasone) and 46 = 28 + 18 (cortisol) at 25 degrees C. These data fit quite well with a two-step model [Ross & Subramanian (1981) Biochemistry 20, 3096-3102] proposed for ligand-protein interactions, which involves a partial immobilization of the reacting species governed by hydrophobic forces, followed by stabilization of the complex by short-range interactions. On the basis of this model, an analysis of the transition-state thermodynamics led to the conclusion that no more than half of the steroid molecular area is engaged in the binding process.
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry
Cited by
35 articles.
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