High affinity progesterone binding sites of human uterine microsomal membranes

Journal of steroid biochemistry, 20(2), 569-573

DOI 10.1016/0022-4731(84)90125-0 PMID 6708539 Source

Abstract

Microsomal membranes sedimented at 40 000 g were prepared from human myometrium samples. The progesterone binding properties of microsomal suspensions were determined by incubating microsomes and [3H]progesterone at 4 degrees C. Dextran-coated charcoal was used for the separation of bound and free steroids. Membrane-associated progesterone binding sites of high affinity were identified in microsomes prepared from pregnant and nonpregnant uteri. The binding was saturable (Kd approximately 4 X 10(-9) M, concentration of binding sites 400-900 fmol/mg microsomal protein) and specific for natural progesterone. Of 21 steroids tested only 21-hydroxy-4-pregnene-3,20-dione, 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone and testosterone showed moderate competition against progesterone with relative affinities between 7.0-20.0% (R.A. of progesterone 100%). 5 alpha-Dihydroprogesterone and 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone showed weak cross reaction (relative affinities 2.5 and 2.0%, respectively). Corticosteroids, estrogens and the 5 synthetic progestins tested showed only weak competition with relative affinities lower than 1.0%. These microsomal progesterone binding sites of high affinity and limited capacity resemble steroid hormone receptors but they are different from the soluble cytosolic progesterone receptor of human uterus in terms of steroid specificity. The physiological function of this microsomal progesterone receptor is unknown.

Topics

progesterone receptor uterine tissue, microsomal progesterone binding sites, progesterone mechanism of action uterus, steroid hormone receptor myometrium, progesterone binding affinity human uterus, intracellular progesterone receptors, membrane-associated progesterone binding, progesterone specificity human myometrium, steroid hormone physiology uterus, molecular basis progesterone action, progesterone pharmacology reproductive tissue

Cite this article

Haukkamaa, M. (1984). High affinity progesterone binding sites of human uterine microsomal membranes. *Journal of steroid biochemistry*, *20*(2), 569-573. https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-4731(84)90125-0

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