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1.
A fluorescent derivative of the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist analog, [D-Lys6]GnRH, was synthesized for receptor studies and shown to be biologically active. The rhodamine-derivatized peptide (Rh-GnRH) retained 40% of the receptor binding activity of [D-Lys6]GnRH, and 50% of the luteinizing hormone-releasing activity assayed in cultured pituitary cells. The fluorescent analog was employed to visualize the distribution of GnRH receptors in cultured pituitary cells, using the technique of video-intensified fluorescence microscopy. The binding of Rh-GnRH was confined to the large gonadotrophs which comprised 15% of the cell population. The specificity of the binding was shown by the absence of significant fluorescence in the presence of a 100-fold excess of [D-Lys6]GnRH, or when Rh-GnRH was incubated with choriocarcinoma, neuroblastoma, or 3T3 cell lines devoid of GnRH receptors. The interaction of Rh-GnRH with living pituitary cells was characterized by an initial diffuse distribution, followed by the formation of polar aggregates that later appeared to be internalized. These observations emphasize the value of fluorescent derivatives of GnRH for elucidating the course of the interaction with specific receptors on pituitary gonadotrophs. The initial results indicate that GnRH-receptor complexes undergo aggregation during stimulation of luteinizing hormone release, and are later internalized for subsequent degradation and/ or intracellular actions.  相似文献   

2.
The receptor-binding properties and in vitro biological effects of a highly active gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist, [N-acetyl-D-p-chloro-Phe1,2D-Trp3,D-Lys6,D-Ala10]GnRH, were compared with those of the GnRH superagonist analog, [D-Ala6] des-Gly10-GnRH-N-ethylamide. In rat pituitary particles and isolated pituitary cells, the 125I-labeled GnRH antagonist showed saturable high-affinity binding (Ka v 8.4 +/- 1.4 X 10(9) M-1) to the same receptor sites which bound the GnRH agonist. The rate of dissociation of the receptor-bound antagonist from pituitary particles and cells was extremely slow in comparison with that of the agonist ligand. Also, dissociation of the antagonist analog was incomplete, with a residual fraction of tightly bound ligand that was proportional to the duration of preincubation. The [D-Lys6]GnRH antagonist prevented GnRH-induced luteinizing hormone release during static incubation and superfusion of cultured pituitary cells, but in contrast to the agonist did not cause desensitization of the gonadotroph. Although the antagonist caused a prolonged reduction in available GnRH receptor sites, this was attributable to persistent occupancy by the slowly dissociating ligand rather than to receptor loss. Autoradiographic analysis of [D-Lys6]GnRH-antagonist uptake by cultured pituitary cells revealed that the peptide remained bound at the cell membrane for up to 2 h, in contrast with the rapid endocytosis of GnRH agonists. The slow dissociation of receptor-bound antagonist was consistent with its ability to cause sustained blockade of GnRH actions, and its prolonged cell-surface location suggests that receptor activation is necessary to initiate the rapid internalization of hormone-receptor complexes that is a feature of the agonist-stimulated gonadotroph.  相似文献   

3.
Studies on the regulation of gonadotropin secretion in dissociated pituitary cell cultures are described. Initial studies employing a ferritin-labelled analogue of gonadotropin hormone releasing hormone (GnRH) to localize its receptor sites on the gonadotropin cell surface that while these receptor sites initially have a random monodisperse distribution, binding of the ligand causes coarse aggregation and internalization of the GnRH receptor. These events are not due to the multivalency of the ligand and probably reflect redistributive events in vivo. By using an octapeptide analogue GnRH that binds to the GnRH receptor but lacks gonadotropin releasing activity in conjunction with sequence-specific antisera it is shown that antibodies that bind the octapeptide can induce the octapeptide to release gonadotropin. These data suggest that receptor aggregation is important in GnRH stimulation. Finally immunocytochemical studies are described in which golg-protein-A-antibody complexes are used to identify gonadotropins on ultrathin frozen sections of porcine pituitary cells. These studies indicate that in porcine gonadotropin cells the majority of the secretory granules contain both luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone.  相似文献   

4.
The stimulation of luteinizing hormone (LH) release and cyclic GMP (cGMP) production in rat anterior pituitary cells by gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) are receptor mediated and calcium dependent, and have been shown to be accompanied by increased phospholipid turnover and arachidonic acid release. The incorporation of 32Pi into the total phospholipid fraction of pituitary gonadotrophs was significantly elevated by 10(-8) M GnRH, with specific increases in the labeling of phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidic acid (PA). Since PA acts as a calcium ionophore in several cell types, its effects upon calcium-mediated gonadotroph responses were compared with those elicited by GnRH. In rat pituitary gonadotrophs prepared by centrifugal elutriation, PA stimulated LH release and cGMP production by 9-fold and 5-fold, respectively. The stimulation of LH release by 30 microM PA was biphasic in its dependence on extracellular calcium concentration, rising from zero in the absence of calcium to a maximum of 10-fold at 0.5 mM Ca2+ and declining at higher calcium concentrations. In dose-response experiments, PA was 3-fold more potent at 0.5 mM Ca2+ than at 1.2 mM Ca2+. The cGMP response to PA in cultured gonadotrophs was also calcium dependent, and was progressively enhanced by increasing Ca2+ concentrations up to 1.5 mM. The ability of PA to stimulate both LH release and cGMP formation in a calcium-dependent manner suggests that endogenous PA formed in response to GnRH receptor activation could function as a Ca2+ ionophore in pituitary gonadotrophs, and may participate in the stimulation of gonadotroph responses by GnRH and its agonist analogs.  相似文献   

5.
These studies examined whether the decrease in pituitary responsiveness to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) observed during lactation in the rat results from a change in pituitary GnRH receptors. GnRH binding capacity was determined by saturation analysis using D-Ala6 as both ligand and tracer. During the estrous cycle, the number of GnRH binding sites increased from 199 +/- 38 fmol/mg protein on estrus to 527 +/- 31 fmol/mg protein on the morning of proestrus, whereas there was no change in receptor affinity (Ka, 6-10 X 10(9) M-1), During lactation, females nursing 8 pups on Days 5 or 10 postpartum had 50% fewer GnRH receptors (109-120 fmol/mg protein) than observed during estrus or diestrus 1 (199-242 fmol/mg protein) although receptor affinity was similar among all the groups. No deficits in pituitary GnRH receptors were observed in females nursing 2 pups on Day 10 postpartum. Removal of the 8-pup suckling stimulus for 24 or 48 h resulted in a dramatic increase in GnRH receptor capacity by 24 h from 120 +/- 16 to 355 +/- 39 fmol/mg protein. The rise in GnRH receptors after pup removal was accompanied by an increase in serum luteinizing hormone (LH) and estradiol concentrations. To assess the role of ovarian steroids in determining GnRH receptor capacity during lactation, females were ovariectomized (OVX) on Day 2 postpartum. Suckling of a large litter (8 pups) completely blocked the postcastration rise in serum LH and in pituitary GnRH receptors on Day 10 postpartum (OVX+ 8, 77 +/- 12 fmol/mg protein; OVX+ 0, 442 +/- 38 fmol/mg protein).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The feedback regulatory control mechanism exerted by activated Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent protein C kinase upon gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) binding, stimulation of phosphoinositide turnover and gonadotropin secretion was investigated in cultured pituitary cells. Addition of the tumor promoter phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), at concentrations which activate pituitary protein C kinase, to cultured pituitary cells resulted in up-regulation of GnRH receptors (155% at 4 h). The stimulatory effect of GnRH on [3H]inositol phosphates (Ins-P) production in myo-[2-3H]inositol prelabeled pituitary cells was not inhibited by prior treatment of the cells with TPA (10(-9)-10(-7) M). Higher concentrations of TPA (10(-6)-10(-5) M) inhibited the effect of GnRH on [3H]Ins-P production. Increasing concentrations of TPA or the permeable analog of diacylglycerol 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol (OAG) stimulated luteinizing hormone (LH) release from cultured pituitary cells with ED50 values of 5 x 10(-9) M and 10 micrograms/ml, respectively. No consistent inhibition or additivity of LH release was observed when increasing doses of TPA or OAG were added with a submaximal dose of GnRH. These results suggest that protein C kinase might mediate the known homologous up-regulation of GnRH receptors during the reproductive cycle. Protein C kinase is positively involved in mediating the process of gonadotropin secretion. Unlike many other systems, activation of protein C kinase in pituitary gonadotrophs is not involved in negative feed-back regulation of stimulus-secretion-coupling mechanisms in GnRH-stimulated gonadotrophs.  相似文献   

7.
The neurohormone gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is a decapeptide which is synthesized in the hypothalamus and released into the hypophysial portal system in a pulsatile manner. GnRH exerts its effect on the anterior pituitary gonadotrophs where it regulates the secretion and synthesis of gonadotropins (luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone) through receptor-mediated actions. The GnRH receptor has been characterized and shown to be coupled to the formation of 'second messengers' which participate in signal transduction mechanisms. GnRH stimulation of luteinizing hormone release is a Ca2(+)-dependent process. G protein, phosphoinositide hydrolysis, protein kinase C as well as arachidonic acid and some of its metabolites were identified as possible mediators in the process.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), beta-endorphin and its antagonist naloxone on the expression of luteinizing hormone (LH) subunit genes and LH secretion were examined in ovariectomized and/or cycling female rats through their direct microinjection into the third cerebral ventricle, in the proximity of the hypothalamus-pituitary complex. GnRH (1 nM) induced a significant augmentation of the pituitary content of alpha mRNA when administered 15, 30 or 60 min intervals over 5 h to ovariectomized rats whereas only the 30 and 60 min intervals were effective in increasing LHbeta mRNA, and the 60 min intervals for LH release. This was in agreement with the established concept of a pulse-dependent regulation of gonadotropin synthesis and release. Hourly pulses of GnRH also increased alpha and LHbeta mRNA levels when microinjected in female cycling rats during proestrus or diestrus II. Using this model we observed a marked negative influence of hourly intracerebral microinjections of beta-endorphin on LH mRNA content and LH release in ovariectomized rats while naloxone had no effect. This suggests that endogenous beta-endorphin was unable to exert its negative action on beta-endorphin receptors that were present and responded to the ligand. The present approach would be valuable for the exploration of the mechanisms of action of beta-endorphin or other substances on the functions of the gonadotrophs.  相似文献   

9.
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) stimulates luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) release from pituitary gonadotrope cells. Additional receptor-mediated actions of the releasing hormone include homologous regulation of both the GnRH receptor and of cell responsiveness. While it is apparent that the release mechanism is Ca2+ mediated, it remains unclear how this receptor-mediated action is integrated with regulation of the receptor and with cell responsiveness. It is the purpose of this review to describe the requirements for gonadotropin release as well as for receptor and response regulation in order to prepare an integrated model for these actions of the releasing hormone.  相似文献   

10.
A single injection of estradiol valerate (EV) induces, after a lag period of 4-6 wk, a chronic anovulatory polycystic ovarian (PCO) condition in adult rats. This condition is associated with a selective compromise of luteinizing hormone (LH) release and/or synthesis reflected in low basal serum LH concentrations, decreased pituitary content of LH, and decreased gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-stimulated LH secretion. The present study was undertaken to determine to what extent the aberrant LH release in rats with PCO could be related to alterations in pituitary content of GnRH receptors. Pituitary GnRH-receptor content was assessed by the evaluation of saturation binding of a GnRH analog, [125I]-D-Ala6-des-Gly10-GnRH, to pituitary membrane preparations. The receptor content of pituitaries from rats with PCO was compared to that obtained from intact animals at estrus and diestrus. Receptor levels in ovariectomized normal rats and rats with PCO were also assessed. The pituitary GnRH receptor content in PCO rats was similar to that observed in normal controls at estrus and was significantly lower than that for rats at diestrus. Although a twofold increase in pituitary GnRH receptor content was observed at 28 days following the castration of control rats, GnRH receptor content in the pituitaries of PCO rats, at 28 days following ovariectomy, remained unchanged. Although, castration-induced elevations in mean serum LH and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) concentrations were observed in both the PCO and control animals, the rise in both gonadotropins was significantly attenuated in the PCO-castrates when compared to the ovariectomized controls. Since GnRH is a major factor in the regulation of pituitary GnRH receptor content, these findings suggest that hypothalamic GnRH release is impaired in rats with PCO and that this impairment is independent of any influences from the polycystic ovaries.  相似文献   

11.
The hypothalamic neuropeptide gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) stimulates luteinizing hormone secretion via receptor-mediated activation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis to yield inositol phosphates and diacylglycerol. Application of anion-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography together with absorbance and radiochemical flow detection has enabled both the characterization and quantitative estimation of pituitary cell inositol phosphates and phosphoinositides. In cultured pituitary cells, GnRH caused a rapid and progressive rise in the formation of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate and of higher polyphosphoinositols corresponding to inositol tetrakisphosphate, pentakisphosphate, and hexakisphosphate. The inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate formed during GnRH action was dephosphorylated predominantly via inositol 4-monophosphate rather than the expected metabolite, inositol 1-monophosphate. The catabolism of inositol 4-monophosphate, like that of inositol 1-monophosphate, was inhibited by lithium. For these reasons and because it was the major metabolite of [3H] inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate in permeabilized gonadotrophs, inositol 4-monophosphate appears to represent a specific marker for ligand-stimulated inositol polyphosphate formation and metabolism. The marked and sustained elevations of inositol 4-monophosphate and inositol 1,4-bisphosphate in GnRH-stimulated gonadotrophs indicate that polyphosphoinositides rather than phosphatidylinositol are the preferred substrates of phospholipase C during GnRH action.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The relationship between number of receptors for gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and the ability of the anterior pituitary gland to release luteinizing hormone (LH) was examined in ovariectomized ewes. A GnRH antagonist was used to regulate the number of available receptors. The dose of GnRH antagonist required to saturate approximately 50 and 90% of GnRH receptors in ovariectomized ewes was determined. Thirty min after intracarotid infusion of GnRH antagonist, ewes were killed and the number of unsaturated (i.e., those available for binding) pituitary GnRH receptors was quantified. Infusion of 10 and 150 micrograms GnRH antagonist over a 5-min period reduced binding of the labeled ligand to approximately 50 and 12% of controls, respectively. The effect of reducing the number of GnRH receptors on release of LH after varying doses of the GnRH agonist, D-Ala6-GnRH-Pro9-ethylamide (D-Ala6-GnRH) was then evaluated. One of four doses of D-Ala6-GnRH (0.125, 2.5, 50 and 400 micrograms) was given i.v. to 48 ovariectomized ewes whose GnRH receptors had not been changed or were reduced to approximately 50 or 12% of control ewes. In ewes with a 50% reduction in GnRH receptors, total release of LH (area under response curve) was lower than that obtained for controls (P less than 0.01) at the 0.125-micrograms dose of D-Ala (6.1 +/- 0.7 cm2 vs. 13.5 +/- 0.7 cm2) but was not different at the 2.5-, 50- or 400-micrograms doses of D-Ala6-GnRH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Several lines of anatomic, biochemical, and pharmacological evidence suggest that the neuropeptide substance P has a direct action on cells of the anterior pituitary lobe via a specific neurokinin-1 receptor. In the present study we confirmed this association by combining Bolton-Hunter iodinated substance P-receptor autoradiography with immunocytochemistry on cultured anterior pituitary cells. Radiolabeled substance P was bound to living cell cultures at 0 degrees C, and after a brief wash the cultures were fixed and processed immunocytochemically for prolactin and luteinizing hormone. A large proportion of cultured anterior pituitary cells possessed substance P binding sites. When receptor autoradiography was combined with immunocytochemistry, it was evident that both prolactin- and luteinizing hormone-immunoreactive cells were labeled with radiolabeled substance P. However, a small proportion of the radioligand-labeled cells were not stained by the immunocytochemical procedure, suggesting that additional cell types possess substance P receptors. The present study presents morphological evidence that substance P binds to prolactin- and luteinizing hormone-containing cells of the anterior pituitary lobe. Therefore, it is likely that substance P has a direct action on mammotrophs and gonadotrophs.  相似文献   

15.
In African catfish, two gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) peptides have been identified: chicken GnRH (cGnRH)-II and catfish GnRH (cfGnRH). The GnRH receptors on pituitary cells producing gonadotropic hormone signal through inositol phosphate (IP) elevation followed by increases in intracellular calcium concentration (?Ca(2+)(i)). In primary pituitary cell cultures of male African catfish, both cGnRH-II and cfGnRH dose dependently elevated IP accumulation, ?Ca(2+)(i), and the release of the luteinizing hormone (LH)-like gonadotropin. In all cases, cGnRH-II was more potent than cfGnRH. The GnRH-stimulated LH release was not associated with elevated cAMP levels, and forskolin-induced cAMP elevation had no effect on LH release. With the use of pituitary tissue fragments, however, cAMP was elevated by GnRH, and forskolin was able to stimulate LH secretion. Incubating these fragments with antibodies against cfGnRH abolished the forskolin-induced LH release but did not compromise the forskolin-induced cAMP elevation. This suggests that cfGnRH-containing nerve terminals are present in pituitary tissue fragments and release cfGnRH via cAMP signaling on GnRH stimulation, whereas the GnRH receptors on gonadotrophs use IP/?Ca(2+)(i) to stimulate the release of LH.  相似文献   

16.
The distribution of calcium-activated, phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C) between cytosol and membrane fractions was analyzed in cultured pituitary gonadotrophs during treatment with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). In pituitary cells purified by centrifugal elutriation, the extent of protein kinase C redistribution during GnRH stimulation was correlated with the enrichment of gonadotrophs. GnRH-stimulated release of luteinizing hormone (LH) from gonadotroph-enriched cells was accompanied by a rapid and dose-dependent decrease in cytosolic protein kinase C and by a corresponding increase in protein kinase C activity in the particulate fraction. Retinal directly inhibited the activity of cytosolic protein kinase C and also attenuated the release of LH from GnRH-stimulated gonadotrophs. These findings, and the ability of GnRH to cause rapid translocation of cytosolic protein kinase C to a membrane-associated form, suggest that hormonal activation of protein kinase C is an intermediate step in the stimulation of pituitary LH secretion by GnRH.  相似文献   

17.
The role of protein kinase C in luteinizing hormone (LH) release was analyzed in studies on the actions of phorbol esters and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in normal and protein kinase C (Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent enzyme)-depleted pituitary cell cultures. LH secretory responses of normal pituitary cells to GnRH were reduced but not abolished in Ca2+-deficient medium, consistent with the existence of extracellular Ca2+-dependent and -independent components of GnRH action. Both of these components could be elicited by treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA). The LH secretory responses to TPA and GnRH were additive only at low doses and converged to a common maximum at high concentrations of the agonists in the presence or absence of extracellular Ca2+. The release of stored LH by GnRH and TPA was accompanied by secretion of newly synthesized LH from 2 to 5 h during stimulation by either of the agonists. LH synthesis was increased in a progressive and dose-dependent manner by GnRH and TPA, and the ratio between newly synthesized and released hormone was near 1:2. TPA caused rapid and complete translocation of cytosolic protein kinase C to the particulate fraction of pituitary cells, followed by a progressive decrease in total enzyme content to approximately 10% after 6 h. Partial recovery of the cytosolic enzyme (to 20%) occurred after washing and reincubation for 15 h. Such kinase C-depleted cells showed prominent, dose-dependent reductions in the actions of GnRH and TPA on LH release and synthesis in both normal and Ca2+-deficient media. These observations support the hypothesis that protein kinase C participates in LH biosynthesis and secretion in pituitary gonadotrophs and is involved in the actions of GnRH upon these processes.  相似文献   

18.
Binding of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH, pyro-Glu1-His2-Trp3-Ser4-Tyr5-Gly6-Leu7-Arg8-Pro9-Gly-NH210) to its plasma membrane receptor is the first step leading to the release of pituitary luteinizing hormone. As in the case of other plasma membrane receptors, patching, capping, and internalization of this hormone-receptor complex occurs rapidly following exposure of cultured pituitary cells to physiological levels of releasing hormone. In the present study we sought to determine whether gonadotropin release could occur under conditions which rigorously excluded internalization. A GnRH analog, D-Lys6-GnRH (to which a small quantity of [125I]iodoTyr5-D-Lys6-GnRH was added), was coupled by its epsilon-amino group with an N-hydroxysuccinimide ester then, through a 10-A spacer arm, to a cross-linked agarose matrix. Exposure of the product to proteases, soaps, detergents, solvents, chaotropic agents, or cell cultures resulted in dissociation of < 0.28% of biologically active releasing hormone. The apparent potency of the immobilized analog was one-fourth that of the free form and it was still capable of evoking a full luteinizing hormone secretory response. It can, therefore, be concluded that internalization of GnRH is not required for gonadotropin release.  相似文献   

19.
Mammalian gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) I is the neuropeptide that regulates reproduction. In recent years, a second isoform of GnRH, GnRH II, and its highly selective type II GnRH receptor were cloned and identified in monkey brain, but its physiological function remains unknown. We sought to determine whether GnRH II stimulates LH and FSH secretion by activating specific receptors in primary pituitary cultures from male monkeys. Dispersed pituitary cells were maintained in steroid-depleted media and stimulated with GnRH I and/or GnRH II for 6 h. Cells were also treated with Antide (Bachem, King of Prussia, PA), a GnRH I antagonist, to block gonadotropin secretion. In monkey as well as rat pituitary cultures, GnRH II was a less effective stimulator of LH and FSH secretion than was GnRH I. In both cell preparations, Antide completely blocked LH and FSH release provoked by GnRH II as well as GnRH I. Furthermore, the combination of GnRH I and GnRH II was no more effective than either agonist alone. These results indicate that GnRH II stimulates FSH and LH secretion, but they also imply that this action occurs through the GnRH I receptor. The GnRH II receptors may have a unique function in the monkey brain and pituitary other than regulation of gonadotropin secretion.  相似文献   

20.
The hypothalamic decapeptide, GnRH, stimulates LH and FSH release from pituitary gonadotrophs. Many synthetic peptide analogs, both agonist (GnRH-A) and antagonist (GnRH-AT), have been developed which bind specifically to the GnRH receptor. We have utilized highly potent GnRH-A and GnRH-AT analogs labeled with 18 nm colloidal gold to analyze ultrastructurally the events of binding and interiorization of these specific ligands by gonadotrophs in vitro. To examine internalization of GnRH-A-gold, gonadotrophs were cooled to 4 degrees C and equilibrated with the ligand for 1 h. Next, the cells were either fixed immediately or warmed to 37 degrees C for various times (5, 15 and 30 min) and prepared for electron microscopy. For GnRH-AT-gold, which binds slowly at 4 degrees C, the ligand was incubated with gonadotrophs at 37 degrees C for 15, 30 and 60 min, and the cells were processed for electron microscopy at each time point. In both cases, control gonadotrophs were also incubated in an excess of GnRH-A and GnRH-AT, respectively, in the presence of the gold-conjugated ligands. The results indicated that GnRH-A-gold was bound and rapidly internalized via a receptor-mediated endocytic pathway. GnRH-AT-gold was also bound but showed only limited entry into gonadotrophs; the percentage of intracellular GnRH-AT-gold in gonadotrophs was the same as in other pituitary cells contaminating the gonadotroph fraction and did not increase with time. In the gonadotroph, binding of the specific antagonist ligand to GnRH receptors does not stimulate its interiorization, in contrast to the rapid endocytosis and processing of the agonist ligand. These data suggest that specific ligand internalization requires prior receptor activation, and that GnRH-AT which does not activate the receptor remains bound at the cell surface for a prolonged period.  相似文献   

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