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*CHORIONIC GONADOTROPIN

Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Vol 47, 855-860, Copyright © 1978 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Thyroid-stimulating activity of chorionic gonadotropin and luteinizing hormone

GS Taliadouros, RE Canfield and BC Nisula

While recent evidence indicates that the hCG molecule has intrinsic thyroid-stimulating activity (TSA), it is not clear whether a thyrotropic molecule other than hCG accounts for some of the TSA apparent in the crude or highly purified hCG. To determine if a thyrotropic factor is excluded from crude urinary hCG during purification of hCG, the ratio of interstitial cell-stimulating activity (ICSA) to TSA was determined in the starting material used for hCG preparation as well as in the highly purified hCG preparation. The ratio of the two biological activities did not change significantly during purification, suggesting that no factor present in crude hCG other than hCG itself accounts for the TSA. The highly purified hCG preparation was gel-filtered on Sephadex G-100 and the main protein peak was divided into three fractions. The ratio of TSA to ICSA was the same in each fraction, further indicating that these activities are intrinsic to the same molecule. If hCG has intrinsic thyrotropic activity, as these data indicate, then thyrotropic activity would be expected to be a secondary biological activity of LH, since there are strong structural and functional similarities between LH and hCG. In order to assess the LH molecule for intrinsic TSA, an LH preparation with minimal TSH contamination was prepared by recombining subunits exhibiting minimal TSH immunoreactivity. The LH molecule formed from the recombination of highly purified hCG alpha and ovine LH beta subunits exhibited TSA in the bioassay that was 25 times greater than that expected based on the immunoreactive TSH contamination. There was no evidence to support the existance of a thyrotropic factor other than hCG in either crude or highly purified hCG preparations. Our finding that a hybrid LH molecule structurally similar to hCG with potent ICSA also exhibits intrinsic TSA further extends and supports the hypothesis that TSA is an intrinsic property of the hCG molecule.


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D. Glinoer
The Regulation of Thyroid Function in Pregnancy: Pathways of Endocrine Adaptation from Physiology to Pathology
Endocr. Rev., June 1, 1997; 18(3): 404 - 433.
[Abstract] [Full Text]




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