The biological activity of deglycosylated human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) prepared by treatment of the native hormone with anhydrous hydrogen fluoride was evaluated using suspensions of dispersed cells from biopsies of human corpus luteum obtained during the luteal phase of normal menstrual cycles. A reproducible pattern of response to hCG in terms of progesterone production by luteal cells was established for a range of luteal ages. Deglycosylation of hCG led to a diminished level of maximum response to the hormone. Co-incubation of luteal cells with a level of hCG just sufficient to elicit a maximum response and increasing concentrations of deglycosylated hCG led to a progressive inhibition of the hormonal response; at a concentration of 103 ng deglycosylated hCG/ml (a tenfold excess of deglycosylated hCG over the native hormone), hCG-induced progesterone production was reduced by about 50%. Deglycosylated hCG therefore acts as a partial antagonist for the action of hCG on human luteal cells.
J. Endocr. (1984) 101, 327–332
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