Functional promiscuity of squirrel monkey growth hormone receptor toward both primate and nonprimate growth hormones

S Yi, B Bernat, G Pál, A Kossiakoff… - Molecular biology and …, 2002 - academic.oup.com
S Yi, B Bernat, G Pál, A Kossiakoff, WH Li
Molecular biology and evolution, 2002academic.oup.com
Primate growth hormone (GH) has evolved rapidly, having undergone∼ 30% amino acid
substitutions from the inferred ancestral eutherian sequence. Nevertheless, human growth
hormone (hGH) is physiologically effective when administered to nonprimate mammals. In
contrast, its functional counterpart, the human growth hormone receptor (hGHR), has
evolved species specificity so that it responds only to Old World primate GHs. It has been
proposed that this species specificity of the hGHR is largely caused by the Leu→ Arg …
Abstract
Primate growth hormone (GH) has evolved rapidly, having undergone ∼30% amino acid substitutions from the inferred ancestral eutherian sequence. Nevertheless, human growth hormone (hGH) is physiologically effective when administered to nonprimate mammals. In contrast, its functional counterpart, the human growth hormone receptor (hGHR), has evolved species specificity so that it responds only to Old World primate GHs. It has been proposed that this species specificity of the hGHR is largely caused by the Leu → Arg change at position 43 after a prior His → Asp change at position 171 of the GH. Sequence analyses supported this hypothesis and revealed that the transitional phase in the GH:GHR coevolution still persists in New World monkeys. For example, although the GH of the squirrel monkey has the His → Asp substitution at position 171, residue 43 of its GHR is a Leu, the nonprimate residue. If the squirrel monkey truly represents an intermediate stage of GH:GHR coevolution, its GHR should respond to both hGH and nonprimate GH. Also, if the emergence of species specificity was a result of the selection for a more efficient GH:GHR interaction, then changing residue 43 of the squirrel monkey growth hormone receptor (smGHR) to Arg should increase its binding affinity toward higher primate GH. To test these hypotheses, we performed protein-binding assays between the smGHR and both human and rat GHs, using the surface plasmon resonance methodology. Furthermore, the effects of reciprocal mutations at position 43 of human and squirrel monkey GHRs are measured for their binding affinities toward human and squirrel monkey GHs. The results from the binding kinetic assays clearly demonstrate that the smGHR is in the intermediate state of the evolution of species specificity. Interestingly, the altered residue Arg at position 43 of the smGHR does not lead to an increased binding affinity. The implications of these results on the evolution of the GH:GHR interaction and on functional evolution are discussed.
Oxford University Press