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In order to facilitate the understanding of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist and antagonist action in the primate animal model, the marmoset GnRH receptor (GnRH-R) was cloned and characterised. It was shown to have 95% and 85% sequence identity with the human and rat GnRH-Rs, respectively, and, when transiently expressed in COS-7 cells, it exhibited high-affinity des-Gly(10), [d-Trp(6)]-GnRH binding, with a K(d) value similar to those of both the rat and human forms, but with a greatly reduced B(max) value. The ED(50) for production of GnRH-induced total inositol phosphate (IP) for the marmoset GnRH-R was also similar to those of the rat and the human, but the maximal response compared with the rat receptor was markedly reduced. In all mammalian forms of the GnRH-R cloned to date, the conserved DRY region of G-protein-coupled receptors is substituted with DRS. The most interesting feature of the marmoset GnRH-R was the substitution of this motif with DRF. In order to investigate the DRS to DRF substitution, a Ser(140)Phe rat GnRH-R mutant was generated. The mutant had a K(d) value similar to that of the wild-type rat receptor, although the B(max) value was slightly lower, indicating that expression of functional mutant receptor at the cell surface was reduced. The ED(50) value for IP production was also similar to that of the wild-type receptor, with a reduction in maximal response. The level of internalisation for the rat wild-type and mutant GnRH-R constructs was also assessed and the Ser(140)Phe mutant was shown to have an increased rate of receptor internalisation, suggesting a role for this residue in regulating internalisation. These results show that the marmoset GnRH-R exhibits a substitution in the DRS motif and that this substitution may play a part in desensitisation and internalisation events.