Effects of Fasting on the Distribution of Cytoplasmic and Nuclear Oestrogen Receptors in Rat Liver, Uterus, Pituitary and Hypothalamus before and after Exogenous Oestrogen Administration

1984 
: The accumulation of oestrogen receptors in the liver cell nuclei of intact female rats 45 min after administration of 100 micrograms 17 alpha-ethynyloestradiol-17 beta i.p., decreased progressively during a 72-h fast from 2550 +/- 860 to 257 +/- 67 fmol/mg DNA, a level not significantly different from that in uninjected animals. Cytoplasmic oestrogen receptor concentrations also decreased, but only to about 60% of the original level (from 84.1 +/- 27.5 to 50.3 +/- 2.09 fmol/mg protein during the fast). Similar differences were found when these parameters were examined in normally fed and 72-h-fasted ovariectomized rats. On the other hand these parameters were unaffected in uterus, pituitary and hypothalamus. Uterine cytoplasmic receptor concentrations remained at about 500 fmol/mg protein during the fasting period, those in the pituitary and hypothalamus at about 230 and 30 fmol/mg protein, respectively. Nor was in vivo translocation in these organs affected by fasting. Regardless of nutritional status, the nuclear oestrogen receptor concentrations in uterus rose from about 500 to 2000 fmol/mg DNA after ethynyloestradiol administration, those in the pituitary and hypothalamus from approximately 250 to 2000 and from 250 to 500 fmol/mg DNA respectively.
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