Abstrakt: |
Myometrial and endometrial cells of sheep, rat, and calf in monolayer cell culture display at least three populations of binding sites for oxytocin, with dissociation constants (Kd) of approximately 5 X 10(-9), 4 X 10(-7), and greater than 10(-5) mol/liter, respectively. Binding of the tritium-labeled oxytocin (concentration range, 10(-11) to 5 X 10(-4) M) to the first two sites is displaceable by cold oxytocin. The ratio of binding capacities of the high to medium affinity site appears to average 1:18. Dissociation rate constants for these sites (22 degrees C) are roughly 10(-4) and 2 X 10(-3) s-1, respectively. The capacity of the low affinity site varies in individual cell preparations and is between 5 and 66 times that of the medium affinity site. The low affinity binding sites may not be fully saturable and may follow a nonasymptotic binding isotherm. Logarithms of Kd and binding capacity for individual binding sites are linearly correlated. The coexistence of the three sites was also proven by cluster analysis based on similarities between Kd, binding capacity, and Hill coefficient. Only minor systematic species and cell type differences occur in these properties. The value of Kd for the oxytocin receptor in rat myometrium, derived recently from a stepwise irreversible inhibition of uterotonic response to oxytocin, is close to 2.5 X 10(-7) mol/liter. Additional pharmacological data (pA2 values of structural analogues of oxytocin acting as competitive inhibitors) also reveal a Kd value of 3 X 10(-7). It is, therefore, concluded that the receptors for oxytocin in rat myometrium are identical with the medium affinity site. |