Abstract

Two novel lactogen receptor cDNA clones (2.1 and 1.2 kb) were isolated from a rat ovarian cDNA library. Nucleotide sequence of the 2.1 kb clone codes for a 610 aa receptor (nonglycosylated mol. wgt. 66,000 D) with an extracellular domain, a transmembrane region and an intracellular domain, and exhibited significant overall similarity with the rat liver receptor (310 aa) and both rabbit mammary and human hepatoma receptors (616 and 622 aa). However, the ovarian lactogen receptor sequence contains a unique cytoplasmic domain of 110 aa and consensus sequences for both a tyrosine phosphorylation site and an ATP/GTP type A binding site, and thus has potential for signal transduction and mitogenic activity. The 1.2 kb clone codes for a truncated binding form of 150 aa that is identical with the ovarian long form over only the first 130 residues, and lacks the transmembrane region. Differences between long and short forms of the ovarian lactogen receptors and the truncated liver species may result from alternative splicing. The prolactin holoreceptor gene(s) has the potential for producing several receptor subtypes that differ in tissue-specific expression, size, compartmentalization and mode of signal transduction, and may subserve the divergent functions of prolactin in its several target cells.

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