Vitamin D3—Resistant Fibroblasts Have Immunoassayable 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 Receptors

JW Pike, S Dokoh, MR Haussler, UA Liberman… - Science, 1984 - science.org
JW Pike, S Dokoh, MR Haussler, UA Liberman, SJ Marx, C Eil
Science, 1984science.org
Cultured fibroblasts obtained from patients with tissue resistance to 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin
D3 (vitamin D3-dependent rickets, type II) contain normal, low, or undetectable
concentrations of this hormone's receptor protein as measured by a ligand-binding assay.
Extracts from these cells were evaluated for receptors by immunoassay with a recently
developed monoclonal antibody to the chick receptor. The results show that a protein
sedimenting at 3.7 S and recognizable by the antibody exists in comparable concentrations …
Cultured fibroblasts obtained from patients with tissue resistance to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (vitamin D3-dependent rickets, type II) contain normal, low, or undetectable concentrations of this hormone's receptor protein as measured by a ligand-binding assay. Extracts from these cells were evaluated for receptors by immunoassay with a recently developed monoclonal antibody to the chick receptor. The results show that a protein sedimenting at 3.7S and recognizable by the antibody exists in comparable concentrations in cells from both normal and resistant patients, irrespective of the hormone-binding abnormalities of the cells. This implies that deficiencies in hormone binding associated with inherited tissue resistance to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 probably arise from structural variations in the receptor molecule and not from defective receptor synthesis.
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