Steroid Receptors and Effects of Oestradiol and Progesterone on Chick Oviduct Proteins
Open Access
- 1 June 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 107 (1), 155-164
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1980.tb04636.x
Abstract
After a single injection of oestradiol benzoate (1.5mg/kg) to oestrogen-withdrawn chickens, there was an increase in magnum wet weight, DNA polymerase α activity, adenosine-3′,5′-monophosphate-dependent protein-kinase activity and estrogen-receptor concentration, as measured over 36 h. Besides these intracellular proteins, the secretory proteins ovalbumin and conalbumin were also augmented, and detailed time-course studies were performed. Early induction kinetics for ovalbumin and conalbumin synthesis, which differed for each protein, were independent of the dose of oestradiol benzoate injected if it exceeded 0.1 mg/kg. After 6 h for ovalbumin and 2 h for conalbumin, the induction curves diverged according to the dose of hormone administered and in correlation with the persistence of elevated nuclear oestrogen-receptor concentrations, a result confirmed with 11β-methoxy-17α-ethynyloestradiol (R 2858), a powerful synthetic oestrogen. When oestradiol benzoate (1 mg/kg) and progesterone (3 mg/kg) were injected simultaneously, the rate of conalbumin synthesis, during the first 6–8 h, was lower than that observed in animals injected with oestradiol benzoate alone. However at later times conalbumin synthesis was greater in animals receiving both hormones than with oestradiol alone. In contrast, the rate of ovalbumin synthesis after the combined injection was higher than that induced by either hormone alone throughout the entire experimental period. In order to study further the synergistic and antagonistic activities of these two hormones, a single injection of progesterone (3 mg/kg) was administered 6, 12 or 18 h after 1.5 mg/kg oestradiol benzoate. Progesterone administration resulted in a reduction in cytoplasmic, nuclear and total oestrogen receptor concentration for at least 6 h when compared with the values in birds treated with oestrogen alone. DNA polymerase and protein kinase activities were also reduced during this period. Subsequently, all parameters increased, and by 18–24h after progesterone treatment, reached values higher than those observed in animals receiving oestrogen alone.This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
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