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Insight into thyrotropin receptor cleavage by engineering the single polypeptide chain luteinizing hormone receptor into a cleaving, two subunit receptor.

Authors :
Chazenbalk GD
McLachlan SM
Chen CR
Rapoport B
Source :
European journal of biochemistry [Eur J Biochem] 2001 Apr; Vol. 268 (8), pp. 2261-9.
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

To gain insight into the thyrotropin hormone (TSH) receptor (TSHR) cleavage, we sought to convert the noncleaving luteinizing hormone (LH) receptor (LHR) into a cleaved, two-subunit molecule. For this purpose, we generated a series of LHR mutants and chimeric LH-TSH receptors. Cleavage of mature, ligand binding receptors on the cell surface was determined by covalent 125I-labeled hCG crosslinking to intact, stably transfected mammalian cells. We first targeted a cluster of three N-linked glycans in the LHR (N295, N303, N317) in a region corresponding to the primary TSHR cleavage site, which has only one N-linked glycan. Elimination by mutagenesis of the most strategic N-linked glycan (LHR-N317Q) generated only a trace amount of LHR cleavage. Removal of the other N-linked glycans had no additive effect. A much greater degree of cleavage ( approximately 50%) was evident in a chimeric LH-TSHR in which the juxtamembrane segment of the LHR (domain E; amino acids 317-367) was replaced with the corresponding domain of the TSHR (residues 363-418). Similarly cleaving LHR were created using a much smaller component within this region, namely LHR-NET317-319 replaced with TSHR-GQE367-369, or by substitution of the same three amino-acid residues with AAA (LHR-NET317-319AAA). In summary, our data alter current concepts regarding TSHR cleavage by suggesting limited (not absent) amino-acid specificity in a region important for TSHR cleavage (GQE367-369). The data also support the concept of a separate and distinct downstream cleavage site 2 in the TSHR.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0014-2956
Volume :
268
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11298743
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1432-1327.2001.02103.x