Abstract

The gonadotropins luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, and human chorionic gonadotropin are composed of two noncovalently linked subunits, alpha and beta. The alpha subunit, identical in all three hormones, is produced in excess over the unique beta subunits by pituitary and placenta, and is secreted as uncombined, or free subunit. Free alpha subunit from both tissues has a larger molecular weight than the dimer form. In bovine pituitary an extra O-linked oligosaccharide is added to free alpha subunit, and this modification has recently been detected at an analogous position (threonine 39) on human alpha subunit secreted by choriocarcinoma cells. To assess the contribution of N-linked and O-linked oligosaccharides to the heterogeneity of human free alpha subunit, we have compared free alpha with human chorionic gonadotropin alpha secreted by explants and cultured cytotrophoblasts of human first trimester placenta. We have also examined the free and combined forms of human alpha subunit expressed in transfected C-127 mouse mammary tumor cells. Processing of the alpha subunit in placental and C-127 cells was similar. Tryptic mapping of placental-derived and transfected alpha subunits indicated that O-glycosylation at threonine 39 was not a major modification. In the presence of the oligosaccharide processing inhibitor swainsonine the difference in size between the free and combined forms of alpha was eliminated in both placental and C-127 cells, indicating that the two forms of alpha differed in their N-linked oligosaccharides. Furthermore, the oligosaccharides of free alpha subunits from placental and transfected cells were resistant to endoglycosidase H, but the combined forms of alpha were partially sensitive to the enzyme. Thus, in human first trimester placenta and mouse C-127 cells, combination of alpha with human chorionic gonadotropin beta alters the processing of N-linked oligosaccharides on alpha subunit.

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