• 1 January 1984
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 44  (1) , 407-414
Abstract
Glucocorticoid-receptor complexes in cytoplasm from normal [human] lymphoid and leukemia cells incubated with glucocorticoid can be resolved into 3 different component (activated, nonactivated and mero-receptor complexes), in relative amounts, dependent on the conditions to which the cells or cytosols are exposed. Recently, it was reported that cytosols of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) cells contained high levels of mero-receptor complexes relative to those of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or normal lymphoid cells. The cause for the lability of cytosolic complexes of ANLL cells was examined. Mero-receptor accumulated rapidly in ANLL cytosols in a time-dependent fashion. The accumulation was more rapid in cytosols which contained activated receptor complexes, but it also occurred in cytosols containing only nonactivated receptor forms. Molybdate (20 mM) slowed but did not prevent the conversion to mero-receptor. Cytosols of ANLL specimens of the M4 French-American-British class (with monocytoid differentiation properties), in general, contained more stable complexes than did specimens of the M1 to M3 French-American-British classes (primarily myelocytic differentiation) suggesting that lability may in part be related to the state or direction of differentiation of the leukemic cells. In keeping with this hypothesis, cytosols of polymorphonuclear cells isolated from normal blood were much more labile than were those of monocytes. Mixing experiments with ANLL and CLL cells showed that the lability of ANLL complexes is not due simply to a higher content of proteolytic enzymes in these cells, because addition of ANLL cells or cytosols to CLL specimens did not result in increased mero-receptor. Addition of CLL cells to ANLL specimens greatly stabilized the cytosolic complexes. The findings indicate the presence of an endogenous factor, present in CLL but lacking in ANLL cells, which is capable of stabilizing cytosolic complexes.