Background: A carbohydrate of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) has been proposed to sterically block other FSH molecules from binding to the putative receptor (FSHR) trimer.Results: FSH increases its receptor binding by 3-fold when the steric hindrance is removed.Conclusion: FSHR forms a functional trimer.Significance: This knowledge may improve designs of therapeutic drugs targeting FSHR.
Phosphodiesterases (PDEs) are a family of enzymes that hydrolyze cyclic nucleotides to render them biologically inactive. As such, these enzymes are critical regulators of signal transduction pathways that use cyclic nucleotides as second messengers. PDE4 is one such member that has been identified in ovarian tissue and purported to have a role in the regulation of gonadotropin action. In the present study, selective PDE4 inhibitors enhanced intracellular signaling in a human LH receptor-expressing granulosa cell line. In vivo, PDE4 inhibition in FSH-primed rats resulted in ovulation, indicating that the PDE4 inhibitors can substitute for LH and human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) in this process. Moreover, when coadministered with a subeffective dose of hCG, PDE4 inhibitors acted synergistically to enhance the ovulation response. Inhibitors of PDE3 or PDE5 had no ovulatory effect under similar conditions. Oocytes that were ovulated after PDE4 inhibition could be fertilized in vitro at a rate similar to that of oocytes from hCG-induced ovulation. Moreover, such oocytes were fully capable of being fertilized in vivo and developing into normal live pups. These results indicate that small molecule PDE4 inhibitors may be orally active alternatives to hCG as part of a fertility treatment regimen.
Interferon-beta (IFN-beta) is biologically unstable under physiologic conditions in vitro and is cleared rapidly from the bloodstream on administration in vivo. In the present study, we demonstrate that a soluble recombinant form of the type I IFN receptor subunit, sIFNAR-2, can neutralize the bioactivity of type I IFNs at high concentrations and, at lower concentrations, causes an enhancement of IFN-beta-mediated antiviral activity. The in vitro enhancement is due to the specific interaction of IFN-beta with sIFNAR-2, followed by dissociation of IFN-beta from the complex over time in culture. In vivo, the serum half-life of IFN-beta is extended from minutes to hours when administered intravenously in mice as a sIFNAR-2-associated complex. Moreover, the antitumor effect of IFN-beta is increased by between 9-fold and 27-fold when injected as an sIFNAR-2-associated complex, as demonstrated by an increase in the mean survival time of immunodeficient mice challenged with human Burkitt lymphoma cell (Daudi) xenografts (sIFNAR-2-complexed vs. free IFN-beta treatment). These results show that on association with sIFNAR-2, IFN-beta is more stable in vitro and exhibits increased efficacy when administered in vivo. Administration as a complex with sIFNAR-2 may, therefore, provide a method of enhancing the delivery and effectiveness of type I IFNs.
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