Oxytocin action: Lack of correlation between receptor number and tissue responsiveness
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Supramolecular Structure
- Vol. 14 (2) , 129-138
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jss.400140202
Abstract
Brattleboro rats exhibit diabetes insipidus (DI) because of a genetic autosomal recessive defect in the synthesis of vasopressin; oxytocin is synthesized normally. Preliminary work suggests that elevated circulating oxytocin levels may compensate for the absence of vasopressin. To evaluate the consequences of presumed elevations of oxytocin levels, oxytocin binding and tissue responsiveness have been measured in the uterus and epididymal fat cells of homozygous-DI (HoDI) and heterozygous-DI (HeDI) animals and Sprague-Dawley and Long-Evans controls. Surprisingly, whereas membranes from HoDI rat uteri exhibited an 85% reduction in oxytocin binding, the biological response (contraction) to oxytocin was indistinguishable from the uteri of HeDI or Sprague-Dawley animals. The uterine response to carbachol was also normal in HoDI rats. In contrast, in adipocytes from HoDI animals, the biological response to oxytocin (glucose oxidation) was abolished, whereas the binding of oxytocin was normal; insulin-stimulated glucose oxidation was, however, normal. These results indicate that receptor binding, while critical to hormone action, is not the sole determining factor. With oxytocin action, postreceptor mechanisms are most important in determining oxytocin responsiveness.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hormonal regulation of peptide receptors and target cell responsesNature, 1979
- Oxytocin Receptors: Triggers for Parturition and Lactation?Science, 1979
- Biochemical Actions of Neurohypophysial Hormones and NeurophysinPublished by Elsevier ,1979
- Effects of Autoantibodies to the Insulin Receptor on Isolated AdipocytesJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1977
- Membrane receptors for hormones and neurotransmitters.The Journal of cell biology, 1976
- Membrane Receptors and Hormone ActionAdvances in Protein Chemistry, 1976
- Binding and degradation of 125I-labelled insulin by isolated rat fat cellsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects, 1973
- Monoiodo-oxytocin: Demonstration of Its Biological Activity and Specific Binding to Isolated Fat CellsEndocrinology, 1972
- Evidence for the Synthesis of Oxytocin and Vasopressin in Separate NeuronsNature, 1967
- THE ATTRACTIONS OF PROTEINS FOR SMALL MOLECULES AND IONSAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1949