Effects of glycosylation inhibitors on human growth hormone receptor in cultured human lymphocytes

1988 ◽  
Vol 119 (4) ◽  
pp. 517-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kumiko Asakawa ◽  
Jose A. Hedo ◽  
Phillip Gorden ◽  
Kazuo Shizume

Abstract. IM-9 cultured human lymphocytes were treated with N-linked glycosylation inhibitors, N-linked oligosaccharide processing inhibitors, or neuraminidase to study the effect of glycosylation modification on human growth hormone binding and molecular weight of surface hGH receptor. One mg/l tunicamycin and 20 mmol/l glucosamine decreased 125I-hGH binding to the cells to 46.3 ± 2.4% (mean ± sem) and 21.9 ± 0.2% of the controls, respectively. The hGH binding was 33.0 ± 18.4% of the control value in the cells treated with monensin. The inhibition of binding was due to a decrease in the hGH receptor number without any affinity changes in these cells. Neither 1 mg/l swainsonine nor 100 mg/l castanospermine had any effect on the hGH binding. On the other hand, 125I-hGH binding to neuraminidase-treated cells was significantly enhanced with accompanying affinity changes. When 125I-hGH was cross-linked to IM-9 cells, there were no differences in the molecular weight of hGH receptor complexes (140K) between untreated cells and cells treated with tunicamycin, glucosamine, monensin, or castanospermine. However, the 128K hGH-receptor complex appeared in swainsonine-treated cells; this complex was sensitive to endoglycosidase H. These data show that the altered carbohydrate moiety changed hGH binding and the size of surface hGH receptor and suggest that glycosylation of receptor is important for the binding of hGH and for its physiological action.

1984 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rina Eshet ◽  
Shulamit Peleg ◽  
Zvi Laron

Abstract. The distribution of human growth hormone (hGH) receptor complexes on IM-9 cultured lymphocytes was studied using fluorescein and 125I-labelled hGH (F-hGH and [125I]hGH). The cells labelled with F-hGH were visualized with a sensitive video intensification microscopic system which permitted direct observation of the location of the fluorescent hormone on the surface of the living lymphocytes. At 4°C F-hGH bound diffusely to the cell surface and remained dispersed but following incubation for 30 min at 37°C the hormone receptor complexes aggregated into patches on the cell surface and formed a single cap on one pole of the cell. Progressive internalization into the cell was demonstrated at 37°C with [125I]hGH. It is hypothesized that the aggregation and internalization of the hGH receptor complexes are associated with the action and degradation of the hormone and probably also with the mechanism of down-regulation of the receptors.


1985 ◽  
Vol 225 (2) ◽  
pp. 283-289 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Smal ◽  
J Closset ◽  
G Hennen ◽  
P de Meyts

Our earlier binding studies of the 22000- and 20000-Mr variants of human growth hormone (somatotropin) to pregnant-rabbit liver and mammary receptors [Closset, Smal, Gomez & Hennen (1983) Biochem. J. 214, 885-892] suggested that the 20000-Mr variant was a lower-affinity analogue of the 22000-Mr molecule. Since the receptor population in these tissues is not fully characterized, we have now investigated the binding of both variants to the well-characterized and highly specific human-growth-hormone receptor of the human lymphocyte IM-9 cell line. The maximum bindability of radioiodinated 22000- and 22000-Mr to IM-9 cells was 60 and 45% respectively. Both hormone variants have essentially the same binding characteristics: slow association (equilibrium reached in 8-10h at 30 degrees C), poor reversibility (‘tight binding’), linear Scatchard plot, same specificity as shown by lack of competition by bovine, porcine or equine growth hormones or human growth hormone-(32-46)-(missing in the 20000-Mr variant),-(1-134)- and -(141-191)-peptides. Both unlabelled hormones inhibit binding of both tracers completely, with the 20000-Mr variant being only half as potent as the 22000-Mr one. The apparent affinity is 2.8 × 10(9)M-1 for the 22000-Mr variant and 1.6 × 10(9)M-1 for the 20000-Mr variant. This decreased affinity of the 20000-Mr variant appears to be due to a lower association rate constant. Concentrations (5 ng/ml) of the two variants that occupy about 15% of the total sites induce a marked down-regulation of the receptors after 18h incubation, but the 20000-Mr variant (50% decrease) has a smaller effect than the 22000-Mr variant (75% decrease). Thus the only consequence of the residues-32-46 deletion in the 20000-Mr variant is a lower association rate and affinity for the IM-9 lymphocyte human-growth-hormone receptor. The close binding characteristics of the two forms suggest that the known differences in their insulin-like effects cannot be explained by differences in the nature of their interaction with the human-growth-hormone receptor.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (27) ◽  
pp. eabh3805
Author(s):  
Noah Kassem ◽  
Raul Araya-Secchi ◽  
Katrine Bugge ◽  
Abigail Barclay ◽  
Helena Steinocher ◽  
...  

Because of its small size (70 kilodalton) and large content of structural disorder (>50%), the human growth hormone receptor (hGHR) falls between the cracks of conventional high-resolution structural biology methods. Here, we study the structure of the full-length hGHR in nanodiscs with small-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) as the foundation. We develop an approach that combines SAXS, x-ray diffraction, and NMR spectroscopy data obtained on individual domains and integrate these through molecular dynamics simulations to interpret SAXS data on the full-length hGHR in nanodiscs. The hGHR domains reorient freely, resulting in a broad structural ensemble, emphasizing the need to take an ensemble view on signaling of relevance to disease states. The structure provides the first experimental model of any full-length cytokine receptor in a lipid membrane and exemplifies how integrating experimental data from several techniques computationally may access structures of membrane proteins with long, disordered regions, a widespread phenomenon in biology.


Endocrinology ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 101 (2) ◽  
pp. 350-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
INESE Z. BEITINS ◽  
MARIO C. RATTAZZI ◽  
MARGARET H. MACGILLIVRAY

1997 ◽  
Vol 272 (17) ◽  
pp. 11128-11132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca H. Hackett ◽  
Yi-Ding Wang ◽  
Sharon Sweitzer ◽  
Gerald Feldman ◽  
William I. Wood ◽  
...  

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