Abstract
A complementary DNA for chicken luteinizing hormone (LH) receptor containing the entire coding region was isolated from chicken F1 granulosa cell cDNA library. Nucleotide sequence analysis revealed that there are characteristic GC-rich regions around the N-terminal part. Chicken LH receptor consists of a 19-residue signal peptide, a 366-residue extracellular domain, a 267-residue region containing seven transmembrane segments, and a 76-residue cytoplasmic C-terminal tail. The deduced amino acid sequence of the chicken LH receptor shares 67%, 69%, and 69% identity with the human, rat and porcine LH receptor sequences, respectively, and 51% with chicken FSH receptor. However, an insertion of about 30 amino acid residues is found in chicken LH receptor in the extracellular domain about 44 amino acid residues upstream of the first transmembrane segment. In addition, alternative splicing seems likely to occur at the point where the insertion starts (nucleotide position 933), resulting in the truncated forms of chicken LH receptor with only the extracellular domain. Northern blot analysis revealed the presence of multiple transcripts of LH receptor, a major 3.0-kb and minor 7-kb and 1.5-kb bands, in chicken F1 to F3 granulosa cells. The full length chicken LH receptor cDNA was transiently expressed in COS-7 cells and the transfected cells displayed a concentration-dependent increase in cAMP production when exposed to varying concentrations of chicken LH. This clearly indicates that the cloned cDNA encodes a functional chicken LH receptor protein.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have