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Kinetic Evidence for an Activation Step Following Binding of Human Interferon α2 to the Membrane Receptors of Daudi Cells
Author(s) -
MOGENSEN Knud E.,
BANDU MarieThérèse
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1983.tb07575.x
Subject(s) - alpha interferon , receptor , chemistry , interferon , kinetics , lymphoblast , cell culture , steady state (chemistry) , dissociation constant , binding site , microbiology and biotechnology , biophysics , biology , biochemistry , immunology , physics , genetics , quantum mechanics
A single species of human interferon α (IFN] was labelled with 125 I to high incorporation for binding studies on the B‐lymphoblastoid cell line, Daudi, whose growth is inhibited by low doses of IFN, the effect being saturated at about 100 U/ml (25 pM). The radiolabelled IFN was shown to be fully active and the binding affinity to cellular sites was shown to be unchanged by iodination. Experimental conditions were standardized such that binding and cell growth experiments could be performed on the same intial culture of cells. 125 I‐labelled IFN α (IFN α prepared from Escherichia coli carrying human α2 gene) was added to exponentially growing cultures (mean specific growth rate 0.77 ± 0.07 days −1 ) at a mean concentration of 235000 ± 20000 cells ml −1 . Two types of binding could be discerned on growing cultures: the first with a transient peak followed by a loss or discharge of available sites, the second reaching equilibirum some 3 h after the addition of IFN. Large differences in the apparent dissociation constants were evident. The affinity of binding at the ‘steady‐state’, appeared to be much higher. An analysis of the displacement rates for bound IFN suggested that the two reactions were occuring consecutively over the wholw of the dose range studied (1 – 100 U/ml; 0.25–25pM IFN). In this dose range we found that Daudi cells would eventually stop growing at all doses and that the rates of deceleration of cellular growth were linearly proportional to the dose of IFN in a double‐reciprocal plot (i.e. in analogy to Michaelis‐Menten kinetics). A good congruence was found between the equilibrium constants for binding and for growth inhibition (2.65 pM and 2.39 PM, respectively). The amount of IFN bound at steady state thus determines the rate at which growth is inhibited. We propose that the first reaction represents binding of IFN to surfac receptors, and the second transfer of IFN to an activation complex on the cell membrane. Appropriate models and their general applicability to IFN action are discussed.

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