pubmed-article:8070347 | pubmed:abstractText | It is well known that the TSH receptor (TSHR) undergoes homologous desensitization. That is, prolonged stimulation of thyroid cells with TSH attenuates the cAMP response to subsequent TSH stimulation. However, the existence of homologous desensitization of the recombinant TSHR expressed in nonthyroidal eukaryotic cells is controversial. In the present studies, therefore, we first investigated whether or not the TSHR was desensitized by TSH in 293 human embryonal kidney cells, a cell line in which the LH/CG receptor (LH/CGR) is reported to undergo homologous desensitization. The wild type (wt) TSHR and the wt-LH/CGR stably expressed in 293 cells bound to their respective hormones with high affinity and produced a dose-dependent intracellular cAMP response to hormone stimulation. Pretreatment of cells expressing the TSHR or the LH/CGR with their respective hormones attenuated the cAMP response to subsequent hormone stimulation without down-regulation of the receptors, demonstrating that the TSHR, as well as the LH/CGR, undergoes homologous desensitization in 293 cells. With this cell type expressing mutant TSHRs, we then studied some aspects of the molecular mechanism of TSHR desensitization and compared our data to those obtained with the beta-adrenergic receptor (beta-AR), which is widely regarded as the prototype for receptor desensitization. We cotransfected the wt-TSHR and a chimeric receptor consisting of the LH/CGR extracellular ligand binding domain with the TSHR transmembrane/cytoplasmic signal transducing region. These two receptors have distinct hormone specificities but share common signal regulatory mechanisms. We observed that, like the beta-AR, only hormone-occupied receptor is likely to be involved in homologous desensitization. On the other hand, studies with a truncated TSHR indicated that, in contrast to the beta-AR, the serine/threonine-rich region in the carboxyl two thirds of the cytoplasmic tail of the TSHR is not involved in homologous desensitization. | lld:pubmed |