| Literature DB >> 2978971 |
L J Guilbert1, P W Tynan, E R Stanley.
Abstract
The binding and uptake of the colony-stimulating factor CSF-1 by peritoneal exudate macrophages (PEM) from lipopolysaccharide insensitive C3H/HeJ mice was examined at 2 degrees C, and at 37 degrees C. At 2 degrees C, 125I-CSF-1 was bound irreversibly to the cell surface. At 37 degrees C, 90% of the cell surface associated 125I-CSF-1 was rapidly internalized and subsequently degraded and the remaining 10% dissociated as intact 125I-CSF-1. Thus classical equilibrium or steady state methods could not be used to quantitatively analyze ligand-cell interactions at either temperature, and alternative approaches were developed. At 2 degrees C, the equilibrium constant (Kd less than or equal to 10(-13) M) was derived from estimates of the rate constants for the binding (kon congruent to 8 x 10(5) M-1 s-1) and dissociation (koff less than or equal to 2 x 10(-7) s-1) reactions. At 37 degrees C, the processes of dissociation and internalization of bound ligand were kinetically competitive, and the data was formally treated as a system of competing first order reactions, yielding first order rate constants for dissociation, koff = 0.7 min-1 (t1/2 = 10 min) and internalization, kin = 0.07 min-1 (t 1/2 = 1 min). Approximately 15 min after internalization, low-molecular weight 125I-labeled degradation products began to appear in the medium. Release of this degraded 125I-CSF-1 was kinetically first order over three half-lives (Kd = 4.3 x 10(-2) min-1, t1/2 = 16 min). Thus CSF-1 binds to a single class of receptors on PEM, is internalized with a single rate limiting step, and is rapidly destroyed without segregation into more slowly degrading intracellular compartments.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 2978971 DOI: 10.1002/jcb.240310303
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biochem ISSN: 0730-2312 Impact factor: 4.429