Pavlik E J, Nelson K, van Nagell J R, Donaldson E S, Walden M L, Hanson M B, Gallion H, Flanigan R C, Kenady D E
Biochemistry. 1985 Dec 31;24(27):8101-6. doi: 10.1021/bi00348a040.
Size-exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography was used to characterize the hydrodynamic molecular properties of estrogen receptors complexed with estradiol and the antiestrogen 4-hydroxytamoxifen. Cytoplasmic estrogen receptors complexed with [3H]-4-hydroxytamoxifen did not undergo reductions in hydrodynamic size after exposure to KCl or urea. Nuclear receptors complexed with 4-hydroxytamoxifen eluted as hydrodynamically larger molecules than nuclear receptors complexed with estradiol. Because identical hydrodynamic characterizations were obtained with the covalent ligand [3H]tamoxifen aziridine, these differences in chromatographic behavior are due to differences in ligand-mediated receptor properties and are not the result of ligand dissociation. When estrogen receptors, complexed with either [3H]estradiol or [3H]-4-hydroxytamoxifen, were exposed to trypsin, the receptors complexed with 4-hydroxytamoxifen eluted as larger hydrodynamic forms than receptors complexed with estradiol. These observations are interpreted to indicate that estradiol and 4-hydroxytamoxifen mediate contrasting transitions in the molecular orientation of estrogen receptors. The consequences of the transitions mediated by 4-hydroxytamoxifen appear to be that intermolecular associations become difficult to disrupt with KCl or urea and that the accessibility of trypsin-sensitive proteolytic sites becomes altered. Chromatin fractionation using DNase I and hypotonic Mg2+ solubilization identified a chromatin region that was less readily penetrated by receptors complexed with 4-hydroxytamoxifen than receptors complexed with estradiol.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)