Comparison of in vitro bioactivity of chicken prolactin and mammalian lactogenic hormones

Ewa Ocłoń, Agnieszka Leśniak-Walentyn, Gili Solomon, Michal Shpilman, Anna Hrabia, Arieh Gertler*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recombinant chicken prolactin, expressed in Escherichia coli as an unfolded protein, was successfully refolded and purified to homogeneity as a monomeric protein. Its biological activity was evidenced by its ability to interact with rabbit prolactin receptor extracellular domain and stimulate prolactin receptor-mediated proliferation in three cell types possessing mammalian prolactin receptors. Chicken prolactin activity in those assays was 20–100-fold lower than that of mammalian lactogenic hormones, likely due to lower affinity for mammalian prolactin receptors and not to improper refolding, because in two homologous bioassays, chicken prolactin activity was equal to or higher than that of ovine prolactin and the CD spectra of chicken and human prolactin were almost identical. Our results using seven mammalian lactogenic hormones from five species in three bioassays revealed the major role of species specificity in testing biological activity in vitro. Heterologous bioassays may be misleading and homologous assays are strongly recommended for predicting the activity of species-specific lactogenic hormones in vivo.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)27-34
Number of pages8
JournalGeneral and Comparative Endocrinology
Volume240
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2017

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016

Keywords

  • Bioactivity
  • Chicken
  • Prolactin
  • Recombinant
  • Species specificity

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