细胞对糖皮质激素敏感性的变化:观察和机制。

A W Harris, J D Baxter
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引用次数: 21

摘要

对糖皮质激素敏感性的生理、病理和遗传变异谱进行了综述。这些激素的受体在大多数哺乳动物组织中是共同的,然而反应却大相径庭。尽管受体之间可能存在差异来解释这种多样性,但很可能主要是由于细胞编程不涉及受体。除了组织间的敏感性差异外,组织内的差异也很明显。积累的信息最多的是淋巴细胞系统,对细胞杀伤或对免疫功能的影响等特定反应的敏感性存在差异。在这些系统中,在反应程度(例如,从轻度生长抑制到细胞杀伤)或是否观察到任何效果方面可能存在重大差异。此外,某些反应的剂量要求可以变化几个数量级。在一个给定的组织中,可能存在敏感性的发育变化,而这些变化并非由于受体的明显变化,而敏感性随着年龄的增长而下降,在某些情况下与受体结合活性的变化有关。最后,细胞敏感性可能受到激素和其他因素的影响,这些因素会影响糖皮质激素引发特定反应的能力(以协同或拮抗的方式),或者糖皮质激素调节的相同功能可以被类固醇诱导,在给药后一段时间出现,在类固醇去除后消失。对糖皮质激素的敏感性也会发生遗传变异。在人类中,这些可能是普遍的,影响所有反应组织的糖皮质激素作用,并且可能在某些疾病的发病机制中很重要。然而,在培养的淋巴样细胞和成纤维细胞以及急性淋巴母细胞白血病细胞中,可能观察到最显著的遗传改变,这些细胞通常生长被糖皮质激素抑制或杀死。突变细胞系产生了高度抗性,其中大多数在糖皮质激素受体中有异常。在某些情况下,结合活性完全丧失,很容易解释耐药性。在其他情况下,结合的减少或受体性质的改变使其增加或减少核和DNA结合活性。对这些细胞系的分析表明,许多缺陷是由于受体的某些特性目前尚不清楚,使受体无效,而不是由于检测到的受体水平的数量变化。类固醇耐药细胞出现的频率变化很大,从S49细胞的约10(-5)到某些胸腺细胞系的不到10(-8)…
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Variations in cellular sensitivity to glucocorticoids: observations and mechanisms.

The spectrum of physiological, pathological, and genetic variations in sensitivity to glucocorticoids is reviewed. The receptor for these hormones is common to most mammalian tissues, and yet the responses are widely divergent. Although there may be differences in the receptors to account for some of this diversity, it is likely that it is largely due to cellular programming not involving the receptors. In addition to the intertissue differences in sensitivity, it is also clear that intra-tissue differences occur. The greatest amount of information has been accumulated with lymphoid cell systems and there are sensitivity differences to specific responses such as cell killing or effects on immunological functions. In these systems, there can be major variations in either the extent of the response (e. g., from mild growth inhibition to cellular killing) or whether any effect is observed. Further, dose requirements for certain responses can vary by several orders of magnitude. Within a given tissue there may be developmental changes in sensitivity that are not due to obvious changes in the receptor, and decreased sensitivity with aging that in some cases has been associated with changes in receptor binding activity. Finally, the cellular sensitivity can either be influenced by hormones and other factors that affect the ability of the glucocorticoid to elicit a particular response (in a synergistic or antagonistic manner), or the same function regulated by the glucocorticoid can be inducible by the steroid, appearing some time after administration of the steroid and disappearing after steroid removal. Genetic variations in sensitivity to glucocorticoids also occur. In humans these may be generalized, affecting glucocorticoid action in all responsive tissues, and could be important in the pathogenesis of certain diseases. Perhaps the most striking genetic alterations, however, are observed in cultured lymphoid and fibroblastic cells and in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia cells ordinarily growth inhibited or killed by the glucocorticoid. Mutant cell lines arise that are highly resistant and most of these have abnormalities in the glucocorticoid receptor. In some cases binding activity is totally lost, easily expalining the resistance. In other cases, there is a more modest reduction in binding or a change in receptor properties that give it increased or decreased nuclear and DNA binding activity. An analysis of these cell lines suggests that many of the defects are in some receptor property presently not understood that makes the receptor ineffective rather than the defect being due to the quantitative changes in receptor levels detected. The frequency of emergence of steroid-resistant cells can vary widely from about 10(-5) in S49 cells to less than 10(-8) in certain thymic cell lines...

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