Total amounts of circulating human chorionic gonadotrophin α and β subunits can be assessed throughout human pregnancy using immunoradiometric assays calibrated with the unaltered and thermally dissociated heterodimer
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Journal of Endocrinology
- Vol. 140 (3) , 513-520
- https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.1400513
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to determine the variations in the balance between total (free plus combined) circulating α and β subunits of human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) throughout human pregnancy. The equivalence between the International Units (IU) of hCG (IRP 75/537) and those assigned to the α (IRP 75/569) and β (IRP 75/551) free subunits was experimentally determined by using intact and thermally dissociated hCG. Heat exposure (2 min at 100 °C) of hCG preparations resulted in a complete dissociation of hCG into free, soluble and intact α and β subunits. The hCG and α and β subunit contents of unaltered and heated hCG preparations were assessed by specific immunoradiometric assays. The amount of immunoreactive subunits dissociated by heat from hCG could then be evaluated on a molar basis. Circulating hCG and its free α and β subunits were immunoassayed in 836 blood samples collected from healthy pregnant women at different gestational ages. After conversion of hCG and its subunits into a common IU system, the gestational profiles of the total amounts (free plus combined) of α- and βhCG subunits increased together and peaked at 9–10 weeks of gestation. Thereafter, total α and β subunits decreased and subsequently remained stable until term. The decline in total αhCG subunit was less marked than that of total βhCG subunit. The α- to βhCG ratio was equimolar until 10 weeks of gestation when it increased almost fourfold until term (PPPJournal of Endocrinology (1994) 140, 513–520Keywords
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