Literature DB >> 8137822

A single amino acid substitution in the exoplasmic domain of the human growth hormone (GH) receptor confers familial GH resistance (Laron syndrome) with positive GH-binding activity by abolishing receptor homodimerization.

P Duquesnoy1, M L Sobrier, B Duriez, F Dastot, C R Buchanan, M O Savage, M A Preece, C T Craescu, Y Blouquit, M Goossens.   

Abstract

Growth hormone (GH) elicits a variety of biological activities mainly mediated by the GH receptor (GHR), a transmembrane protein that, based on in vitro studies, seemed to function as a homodimer. To test this hypothesis directly, we investigated patients displaying the classic features of Laron syndrome (familial GH resistance characterized by severe dwarfism and metabolic dysfunction), except for the presence of normal binding activity of the plasma GH-binding protein, a molecule that derives from the exoplasmic-coding domain of the GHR gene. In two unrelated families, the same GHR mutation was identified, resulting in the substitution of a highly conserved aspartate residue by histidine at position 152 (D152H) of the exoplasmic domain, within the postulated interface sequence involved in homodimerization. The recombinant mutated receptor protein was correctly expressed at the plasma membrane. It displayed subnormal GH-binding activity, a finding in agreement with the X-ray crystal structure data inferring this aspartate residue outside the GH-binding domain. However, mAb-based studies suggested the critical role of aspartate 152 in the proper folding of the interface area. We show that a recombinant soluble form of the mutant receptor is unable to dimerize, the D152H substitution also preventing the formation of heterodimers of wild-type and mutant molecules. These results provide in vivo evidence that monomeric receptors are inactive and that receptor dimerization is involved in the primary signalling of the GH-associated growth-promoting and metabolic actions.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8137822      PMCID: PMC394956          DOI: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1994.tb06392.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  EMBO J        ISSN: 0261-4189            Impact factor:   11.598


  45 in total

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Authors:  M A Berg; J Argente; S Chernausek; R Gracia; J Guevara-Aguirre; M Hopp; L Pérez-Jurado; A Rosenbloom; S P Toledo; U Francke
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8.  Absence of the plasma growth hormone-binding protein in Laron-type dwarfism.

Authors:  G Baumann; M A Shaw; R J Winter
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  1987-10       Impact factor: 5.958

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Authors:  W H Daughaday; B Trivedi
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10.  Spectrum of growth hormone receptor mutations and associated haplotypes in Laron syndrome.

Authors:  S Amselem; P Duquesnoy; B Duriez; F Dastot; M L Sobrier; S Valleix; M Goossens
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  1993-04       Impact factor: 6.150

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7.  A mammalian model for Laron syndrome produced by targeted disruption of the mouse growth hormone receptor/binding protein gene (the Laron mouse).

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10.  Alternatively spliced forms in the cytoplasmic domain of the human growth hormone (GH) receptor regulate its ability to generate a soluble GH-binding protein.

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