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Volume 271,
Number 8,
Issue of February 23, 1996 pp. 4518-4527
©1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Deletions of
Portions of the Extracellular Loops of the Lutropin/Choriogonadotropin
Receptor Decrease the Binding Affinity for Ovine Luteinizing Hormone,
but Not Human Choriogonadotropin, by Preventing the Formation of Mature
Cell Surface Receptor
(Received for publication, September 1, 1995; and in revised form, November 7, 1995)
Amy
Abell,
Xuebo
Liu ,
Deborah L.
Segaloff
The rat lutropin/choriogonadotropin receptor (rLHR) is a G
protein-coupled receptor which binds either human choriogonadotropin
(hCG) or lutropin (luteinizing hormone, LH) and, therefore, plays a
central role in reproductive physiology. In addition to the seven
transmembrane helices, three extracellular loops, three intracellular
loops, and a cytoplasmic tail characteristic of all G protein-coupled
receptors, the rLHR also contains a relatively large N-terminal
extracellular domain. Since high affinity hormone binding occurs to
this N-terminal extracellular domain and since G proteins are activated
by intracellular regions of the receptor, it has been hypothesized that
upon hormone binding a portion of the hormone or the receptor's
extracellular domain might interact with the receptor's
extracellular loops and/or transmembrane helices, thus evoking an
intracellular conformational change. To explore this possibility, we
prepared and characterized several mutants of the rLHR in which
portions of the extracellular loops were deleted. Ultimately, it was
not possible to examine the signal transduction properties of the
mutants because all but one mutant were retained intracellularly.
Although the intracellularly retained mutants must be somewhat
misfolded, all were found to bind hCG with high affinity if the cells
were first solubilized in detergent. However, the binding of oLH to the
detergent solubilized mutants was altered. Thus, whereas the wild-type
rLHR bound oLH with two apparent affinities, the solubilized deletion
mutants bound oLH with only one apparent affinity. Although these data
could be interpreted to suggest that an ovine LH (oLH) binding site on
the extracellular loops of the rLHR was deleted, data shown argue
against this hypothesis. Rather, the results presented suggest that the
two apparent affinities of the wild-type rLHR for oLH represent the
binding affinities of two populations of rLHR where the mature, cell
surface form binds oLH with a higher affinity than the immature,
intracellular form. Furthermore, we show that mutations of the rLHR
which cause intracellular retention of the receptor result in a
decrease from two to one apparent binding sites for oLH due to the
absence of the high affinity oLH binding component contributed by the
mature cell surface receptor. Therefore, whereas hCG cannot
discriminate between the mature cell surface wild-type receptor and an
intracellularly retained rLHR mutant, oLH can make this discrimination,
thus suggesting a conformational difference between the two forms of
the receptor.

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Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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