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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Presence in normal human testes of a chorionic-gonadotropin-like substance distinct from human luteinizing hormone.

The high rate of human chorionic gonadotropin production by testicular tumors caused us to investigate the possibility that normal human testes contain small amounts of that substance. Extracts of human testes obtained at autopsy demonstrated parallel inhibition curves to the human chorionic gonadotropin standard in a radioimmunoassay specific for the hormone. The immunoreactive material was adsorbed onto concanavalin A, a reaction characteristic of glycoproteins, and was eluted within the chorionic gonadotropin range on Sephadex G-100 column chromatography. Solubilized receptor proteins for the hormone could not be identified in the extracts. The demonstration that the normal human testes contain a glycoprotein similar or identical to human chorionic gonadotropin suggests that the fetal genome responsible for production of the hormone during pregnancy is not completely suppressed in the adult. Excessive productton of this glycoprotein may account for the high levels of human chorionic gonadotropin reported in the serum of patients with germ-cell tumors of the testes.[1]

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