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Endocrine Reviews logoLink to Endocrine Reviews
. 2015 Jul 18;2016(1):23–42. doi: 10.1210/er.2015-1098.2016.1

Withdrawn: TSH Receptor Cleavage Into Subunits and Shedding of the A-Subunit; A Molecular and Clinical Perspective

Basil Rapoport 1,, Sandra M McLachlan 1
PMCID: PMC6958993  PMID: 27454362

Abstract

The TSH receptor (TSHR) on the surface of thyrocytes is unique among the glycoprotein hormone receptors in comprising two subunits: an extracellular A-subunit, and a largely transmembrane and cytosolic B-subunit. Unlike its ligand TSH, whose subunits are encoded by two genes, the TSHR is expressed as a single polypeptide that subsequently undergoes intramolecular cleavage into disulfide-linked subunits. Cleavage is associated with removal of a C-peptide region, a mechanism similar in some respects to insulin cleavage into disulfide linked A- and B-subunits with lossofaC-peptideregion. The potential pathophysiological importance of TSHR cleavage into A-and B-subunits is that some A-subunits are shed from the cell surface. Considerable experimental evidence supports the concept that A-subunit shedding in genetically susceptible individuals is a factor contributing to the induction and/or affinity maturation of pathogenic thyroid-stimulating autoantibodies, the direct cause of Graves' disease. The noncleaving gonadotropin receptors are not associated with autoantibodies that induce a “Graves' disease of the gonads.” We also review herein current information on the location of the cleavage sites, the enzyme(s) responsible for cleavage, the mechanism by which A-subunits are shed, and the effects of cleavage on receptor signaling. (Endocrine Reviews 37: 114–134, 2016)


The study compared CTRP9 levels in obese and lean subjects, and in morbidly obese patients after bariatric surgery. CTRP9 levels are elevated in obesity and decrease following weight loss surgery.


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