Evidence of a gene-dosage effect for the glucocorticoid receptor in trisomy 18 mice

1987 
The amount of cytosolic glucocorticoid receptor in liver of Ts18, Ts16, and Ts19 vs euploid mouse fetuses was studied after incubation of [3H]dexamethasone with cytosol followed by isoelectric focusing on polyacrylamide gels. In addition, corticosterone concentrations and enzyme activities of alanine aminotransferase and tyrosine aminotransferase were measured in the cytosol of the livers. The amount of glucocorticoid receptor in the cytosol fractions of the livers was always higher in the Ts18 than in the euploid fetuses of the same litter. It was also significantly (P less than 0.0005) higher if pooled data from different litters were analyzed. The ratio of the glucocorticoid receptor in Ts18 vs euploid mice varied between 1.3 and 4.7, with a mean of 2.1. In contrast, the glucocorticoid receptor levels in Ts16 and Ts19 fetuses were not different from the corresponding euploid controls. Comparing the corticosterone levels of the three trisomies tested with the corresponding euploid fetuses, no significant differences were found, indicating that the markedly elevated cytosolic glucocorticoid receptor concentrations in Ts18 were not due to different corticosterone levels. This finding is consistent with the assignment of the glucocorticoid receptor gene to chromosome 18 in the mouse. There was no correlation between glucocorticoid receptor levels and the activity of the two glucocorticoid inducible enzymes tested in the liver of mouse fetuses.
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