1. Academic Validation
  2. Evidence for Follicle-stimulating Hormone Receptor as a Functional Trimer

Evidence for Follicle-stimulating Hormone Receptor as a Functional Trimer

  • J Biol Chem. 2014 May 16;289(20):14273-82. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M114.549592.
Xuliang Jiang 1 David Fischer 2 Xiaoyan Chen 3 Sean D McKenna 2 Heli Liu 3 Venkataraman Sriraman 2 Henry N Yu 2 Andreas Goutopoulos 2 Steve Arkinstall 2 Xiaolin He 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 From the EMD Serono Research and Development Institute, Billerica, Massachusetts 01821 and [email protected].
  • 2 From the EMD Serono Research and Development Institute, Billerica, Massachusetts 01821 and.
  • 3 the Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Biological Chemistry, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois 60611.
Abstract

Follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (FSHR), a G-protein coupled receptor, is an important drug target in the development of novel therapeutics for reproductive indications. The FSHR extracellular domains were observed in the crystal structure as a trimer, which enabled us to propose a novel model for the receptor activation mechanism. The model predicts that FSHR binds Asnα(52)-deglycosylated FSH at a 3-fold higher capacity than fully glycosylated FSH. It also predicts that, upon dissociation of the FSHR trimer into monomers, the binding of glycosylated FSH, but not deglycosylated FSH, would increase 3-fold, and that the dissociated monomers would in turn enhance FSHR binding and signaling activities by 3-fold. This study presents evidence confirming these predictions and provides crystallographic and mutagenesis data supporting the proposed model. The model also provides a mechanistic explanation to the agonist and antagonist activities of thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor autoantibodies. We conclude that FSHR exists as a functional trimer.

Keywords

Allosteric Regulation; Arrestin; Cysteine-knot Growth Factor; G Protein-coupled Receptors (GPCR); Glycoprotein Hormones; Receptor Structure-function; Reproduction.

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