Clearance, Metabolic Fate and Tissue Distribution of an Injected Bolus of Photoaffinity-Labeled Rat Androgen Binding Protein
Author(s) -
Benjamin J. Danzo,
Barbara C. Eller
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
biology of reproduction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.366
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 1529-7268
pISSN - 0006-3363
DOI - 10.1095/biolreprod31.2.259
Subject(s) - sephadex , size exclusion chromatography , gel permeation chromatography , dimer , gel electrophoresis , biology , androgen binding protein , polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis , biochemistry , chemistry , chromatography , enzyme , androgen , hormone , organic chemistry , polymer
An injected bolus of tritiated photolabeled rat androgen binding protein (ABP) is cleared from the circulation in a biphasic manner. The rapid component of the clearance curve indicates a clearance half time (t1/2) of 4.24 +/- 0.20 h and the slow component indicates a t1/2 of 13.27 +/- 2.92 h. After injection, photolabeled ABP is rapidly degraded as determined by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels containing sodium dodecyl sulfate. This method dissociates ABP into subunits of approximately 48,000 daltons. One-half hour after injection of photolabeled ABP, 90% of the radioactivity migrates as a 20,000- rather than as a 48,000-dalton moiety; at the 24-h point only 20,000- and 16,000-dalton species were detectable. Chromatography of plasma on Sephadex G-150 indicated that, under nondenaturing conditions, radioactivity was still associated with proteins having a molecular weight similar to the native ABP dimer. These results suggest that the dimer is substrate for the proteolytic processes affecting ABP. Small (congruent to 7000 dalton) fragments of ABP could be detected in urine by G-150 chromatography 2 h after injection. The control protein [3H] bovine serum albumin (BSA) was cleared from the blood with a time course identical to that of photolabeled ABP (t1/2's 4.69 +/- 0.09 h and 13.56 +/- 1.03 h). [3H] BSA was degraded to peptides that were similar in size to those formed from photolabeled ABP. The uptake of photolabeled ABP and [3H] BSA by potential target tissues (testis, epididymis and ventral prostate) was equivalent, suggesting that the uptake of ABP was a nonspecific phenomenon rather than a receptor-mediated event. The liver and kidneys contained more radioactivity that did the other tissues and there was a differential uptake and clearance of photolabeled ABP and [3H] BSA by these organs. Whether this difference is related to specific uptake processes or to differences in the size and/or structure of the proteins or other factors remains to be determined.
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