scholarly journals Differential regulation of γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase heavy and light subunit gene expression

1997 ◽  
Vol 326 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaxin CAI ◽  
Zong-Zhi HUANG ◽  
Shelly C. LU

γ-Glutamylcysteine synthetase (GCS) is the rate-limiting enzyme in the biosynthesis of glutathione and is composed of a heavy and a light subunit. Although the heavy subunit is enzymically active alone, the light subunit plays an important regulatory role by making the holoenzyme function more efficiently. In the current study we examined whether conditions which are known to influence gene expression of the heavy subunit also influence that of the light subunit, and the mechanisms involved. Treatment of cultured rat hepatocytes with hormones such as insulin and hydrocortisone, or plating hepatocytes under low cell density increased the steady-state mRNA level of the heavy subunit only. Treatment with diethyl maleate (DEM), buthionine sulphoximine (BSO) and t-butylhydroquinone (TBH) increased the steady state mRNA level and gene transcription rates of both subunits. These treatments share in common their ability to induce oxidative stress and activate nuclear factor κB (NF-κB). Treatment with protease inhibitors 7-amino-1-chloro-3-tosylamido-2-heptanone (TLCK) or L-1-tosylamido-2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone (TPCK) had no influence on the basal NF-κB and GCS subunit mRNA levels, but blocked the activation of NF-κB by DEM, BSO and TBH, and the increase in GCS heavy subunit mRNA level by BSO and TBH. On the other hand, the DEM-, BSO- and TBH-induced increase in GCS light-subunit mRNA level was unaffected by TLCK and TPCK. Thus only the heavy subunit is hormonally regulated and growth sensitive, whereas both subunits are regulated by oxidative stress. Signalling through NF-κB is involved only in the oxidative-stress-mediated changes in the heavy subunit gene expression.

1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (10-11) ◽  
pp. 1238-1248 ◽  
Author(s):  
Normand Marceau ◽  
Andrée Grenier ◽  
Micheline Noel ◽  
Donald Mailhot ◽  
Anne Loranger

Intermediate filaments of rat hepatocytes are composed of cytokeratins 8 and 18 (CK8 and CK18, respectively). Recent work from our laboratory has indicated a close relationship between the synthesis of these cytokeratins, their organization into intermediate filaments, and the promotion of growth and differentiation of cultured rat hepatocytes by insulin, epidermal growth factor, and dexamethasone. In the present study, we examined the mRNA expression, level of protein synthesis, and fibrillar distribution of cytokeratins 8 and 18 and actin in hepatocytes, isolated from normal and dexamethasone-injected rats and cultured as monolayers or spheroids in the presence of insulin, or from normal rat hepatocytes, cultured as monolayers in the presence of dexamethasone, insulin, and dimethyl sulfoxide. The CK8 mRNA level was lower in hepatocytes isolated from noninjected rats and cultured as either monolayers or spheroids, than in those from dexamethasone-injected rats. However, the CK18 mRNA level varied in a manner that was different from that of CK8 mRNA, showing that the modes of expression of the two genes were independent. The various changes in hepatocyte culture conditions led to variations in albumin mRNA levels that largely followed those observed in CK8 mRNA levels. In the case of actin, the amount of mRNAs varied from relatively high levels in hepatocyte monolayers to extremely low levels in hepatocyte spheroids, even though in both cases the cells were isolated from dexamethasone-injected rats. These changes in mRNA levels did not necessarily correlate with changes in the synthesis of cytokeratins 8 and 18, and actin. Changes in culture conditions induced a major reorganization in the distribution of cytokeratin intermediate filaments and actin filament between the region near the surface membrane and the cytoplasm. The most divergent patterns in cytokeratin intermediate filaments and actin filament distributions were observed between hepatocytes cultured as spheroidal aggregates and as monolayers in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide. The former condition resulted in patterns of cytokeratin and actin gene expression and fibrillar organization that best matched those in situ. In the latter condition, inappropriate patterns were obtained, in spite of the fact that dimethyl sulfoxide treated hepatocytes are known to exhibit survival and functional activities equivalent to that of hepatocyte spheroids. These results demonstrate for the first time that the survival and functional activity (i.e., albumin production) of rat hepatocytes in vitro is not necessarily correlated with a particular pattern of cytokeratin and actin gene expression and fibrillar arrangement.Key words: gene expression, cytokeratins, intermediate filaments, cytoskeleton, hepatocytes.


1988 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. D. Abbot ◽  
K. Docherty ◽  
R. N. Clayton

ABSTRACT The control of anterior pituitary hormone gene expression by testosterone in male rat pituitaries in vivo was investigated using dot-blot mRNA-cDNA hybridization assays. Common α subunit mRNA levels doubled by 2 days after orchidectomy and rose progressively to reach plateau levels three to four times intact control values by 2 weeks. LH-β mRNA increased significantly (≃50%) within 12h, and thereafter progressively to seven times intact control values by 3 weeks after orchidectomy. The changes in α mRNA were likely to have occurred in gonadotrophs and not thyrotrophs, since TSH-β mRNA levels were unaltered by orchidectomy. LH subunit mRNA changes were accompanied by an initial (1–4 days) decrease in pituitary LH content; thereafter, pituitary LH increased in parallel with and by a similar magnitude to the LH-β mRNA. Serum LH rises occurred before significant increases in LH subunit mRNA after orchidectomy. The lack of temporal correlation between mRNA levels and serum and pituitary LH in the early stages after removal of testosterone feedback contrasts with the good correlation when a new steady state was achieved after 3–4 weeks, and indicates differing kinetics for changes in these aspects of gonadotroph function. An inhibitory effect of testosterone on LH subunit gene expression was confirmed by prevention of the rise in α and LH-β mRNAs when treatment commenced immediately after castration. However, pituitary LH content and serum LH levels were reduced relative to control values, suggesting additional inhibitory actions of testosterone on translational and post-translational events in gonadotrophs. A stimulatory effect of testosterone on α mRNA levels was observed between 4 and 24 h after a single injection in rats castrated 2 weeks previously, no effect being seen on LH-β mRNA. The mechanism for this action remains to be elucidated. Gene specificity of testosterone action was confirmed by unaltered levels of mRNA for prolactin, GH, TSH-β subunit and actin under all experimental conditions. No changes in pituitary content of prolactin or GH were found. We conclude that regulation of LH subunit gene expression by testosterone is an important step in control of gonadotrophin synthesis and availability for release.


1990 ◽  
Vol 269 (2) ◽  
pp. 503-506 ◽  
Author(s):  
D A Hood

Cytochrome c oxidase (EC 1.9.3.1) is an enzyme which is composed of subunits derived from both the mitochondrial and the nuclear genomes. To determine whether or not the expression of these two genomes is co-ordinated at the mRNA level, we have examined the steady-state levels of mRNAs coding for cytochrome c oxidase subunit III (mitochondrially encoded) and subunit VIc (nuclear-encoded) in rat tissues. This was compared with the tissue concentration of the holoenzyme, which was estimated by measuring cytochrome c oxidase enzyme activity. The tissues (heart, brain, liver, kidney, soleus muscle and superficial white vastus muscle) possessed a 13-fold range of enzyme activity, which was highest in heart and lowest in the superficial vastus muscle. Specific subunit mRNA levels were quantified by using slot-blot hybridization of cDNA probes to total tissue RNA. The highest values for subunit III and Vlc mRNA tissue contents were found in kidney, followed by liver and heart (40-60% of that of kidney). The white vastus muscle contained the lowest subunit mRNA level (15% of that of kidney). Although some variability was apparent within each tissue, a parallel pattern of mRNA expression of the nuclear- and mitochondrially encoded subunits was observed. Differences between muscle (heart, vastus and soleus) and non-muscle tissues were noted in the relationship between mRNA and protein levels of expression. Thus, although this suggests that tissue-specific regulatory processes operate, the steady-state expression of subunit III and subunit Vlc mRNAs appears to be co-ordinately regulated.


Endocrinology ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 138 (3) ◽  
pp. 1224-1231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ursula B. Kaiser ◽  
Andrzej Jakubowiak ◽  
Anna Steinberger ◽  
William W. Chin

Abstract The hypothalamic hormone, GnRH, is released and transported to the anterior pituitary in a pulsatile manner, where it binds to specific high-affinity receptors and regulates gonadotropin biosynthesis and secretion. The frequency of GnRH pulses changes under various physiological conditions, and varying GnRH pulse frequencies have been shown to regulate differentially the secretion of LH and FSH and the expression of the gonadotropin α, LHβ, and FSHβ subunit genes in vivo. We demonstrate differential effects of varying GnRH pulse frequency in vitro in superfused primary monolayer cultures of rat pituitary cells. Cells were treated with 10 nm GnRH pulses for 24 h at a frequency of every 0.5, 1, 2, or 4 h. α, LHβ, and FSHβ messenger RNA (mRNA) levels were increased by GnRH at all pulse frequencies. α and LHβ mRNA levels and LH secretion were stimulated to the greatest extent at a GnRH pulse frequency of every 30 min, whereas FSHβ mRNA levels and FSH secretion were stimulated maximally at a lower GnRH pulse frequency, every 2 h. GnRH receptor (GnRHR) mRNA levels also were increased by GnRH at all pulse frequencies and were stimulated maximally at a GnRH pulse frequency of every 30 min. Similar results were obtained when the dose of each pulse of GnRH was adjusted to maintain a constant total cumulative dose of GnRH over 24 h. These data show that gonadotropin subunit gene expression is regulated differentially by varying GnRH pulse frequencies in vitro, suggesting that the differential effects of varying GnRH pulse frequencies on gonadotropin subunit gene expression occur directly at the level of the pituitary. The pattern of regulation of GnRHR mRNA levels correlated with that of α and LHβ but was different from that of FSHβ. This suggests that α and LHβ mRNA levels are maximally stimulated when GnRHR levels are relatively high, whereas FSHβ mRNA levels are maximally stimulated at lower levels of GnRHR expression, and that the mechanism for differential regulation of the gonadotropins by varying pulse frequencies of GnRH may involve levels of GnRHR. Furthermore, these data suggest that the mechanisms whereby varying GnRH pulse frequencies stimulate α, LHβ, and GnRHR gene expression are similar, whereas the stimulation of FSHβ mRNA levels may be different.


1992 ◽  
Vol 132 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. Dalkin ◽  
S. J. Paul ◽  
D. J. Haisenleder ◽  
G. A. Ortolano ◽  
M. Yasin ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Gonadal steroids can act both indirectly via gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and directly on the pituitary to regulate gonadotrophin subunit gene expression. Recent studies to assess a possible direct action at the pituitary have shown that testosterone, when given to males in the absence of endogenous GnRH action, selectively increases FSH-β mRNA concentrations. Conversely, in females, oestradiol appears to regulate gonadotrophin subunit mRNAs primarily via GnRH. The present study was designed to determine whether these differing results reflect specific actions of the gonadal steroids themselves or different responses of the pituitary gonadotroph cells in males and females. Rats which had been castrated 7 days earlier were given silicone elastomer implants (s.c.) containing oestradiol (plasma oestradiol 68 ± 4 ng/l) in males or testosterone (plasma testosterone 3·5 ± 0·3 μg/l) in females in the absence or presence of a GnRH antagonist. Seven days later pituitaries were removed and steady-state mRNA concentrations measured by dotblot hybridization. In males, oestradiol reduced LH-β and FSH-β but not α mRNA. The antagonist reduced levels of all three subunit mRNAs in males and the addition of oestradiol had no further effect, suggesting that oestradiol regulates gonadotrophin subunit gene expression in males by suppressing GnRH secretion. In females, testosterone reduced all three subunit mRNAs though FSH-β remained threefold higher than in intact animals. The GnRH antagonist was as effective as testosterone alone and reduced α and LH-β to levels found in intact animals. FSH-β mRNA was partially reduced by antagonist alone in ovariectomized females but the addition of testosterone increased FSH-β twofold versus antagonist alone (as has been observed in males). These findings, together with earlier data, suggest that testosterone increased FSH-β twofold versus antagonist alone (as has been observed in males). These findings, together with earlier data, suggest that testosterone reduces gonadotrophin subunit mRNAs by inhibiting GnRH secretion and also acts directly on the gonadotroph to increase steady-state FSH-β mRNA concentrations in both males and females. Journal of Endocrinology (1992) 132, 39–45


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 391-396
Author(s):  
L Hu ◽  
L J Gudas

Retinoic acid (RA) receptor alpha (RAR alpha) and RAR gamma steady-state mRNA levels remained relatively constant over time after the addition of RA to F9 teratocarcinoma stem cells. In contrast, the steady-state RAR beta mRNA level started to increase within 12 h after the addition of RA and reached a 20-fold-higher level by 48 h. This RA-associated RAR beta mRNA increase was not prevented by protein synthesis inhibitors but was prevented by the addition of cyclic AMP analogs. In the presence of RA, cyclic AMP analogs also greatly reduced the RAR alpha and RAR gamma mRNA levels, even though cyclic AMP analogs alone did not alter these mRNA levels. The addition of either RA or RA plus cyclic AMP analogs did not result in changes in the three RAR mRNA half-lives. These results suggest that agents which elevate the internal cyclic AMP concentration may also affect the cellular response to RA by altering the expression of the RARs.


1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 2914-2924
Author(s):  
A Hoekema ◽  
R A Kastelein ◽  
M Vasser ◽  
H A de Boer

The coding sequences of genes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae show a preference for 25 of the 61 possible coding triplets. The degree of this biased codon usage in each gene is positively correlated to its expression level. Highly expressed genes use these 25 major codons almost exclusively. As an experimental approach to studying biased codon usage and its possible role in modulating gene expression, systematic codon replacements were carried out in the highly expressed PGK1 gene. The expression of phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) was studied both on a high-copy-number plasmid and as a single copy gene integrated into the chromosome. Replacing an increasing number (up to 39% of all codons) of major codons with synonymous minor ones at the 5' end of the coding sequence caused a dramatic decline of the expression level. The PGK protein levels dropped 10-fold. The steady-state mRNA levels also declined, but to a lesser extent (threefold). Our data indicate that this reduction in mRNA levels was due to destabilization caused by impaired translation elongation at the minor codons. By preventing translation of the PGK mRNAs by the introduction of a stop codon 3' and adjacent to the start codon, the steady-state mRNA levels decreased dramatically. We conclude that efficient mRNA translation is required for maintaining mRNA stability in S. cerevisiae. These findings have important implications for the study of the expression of heterologous genes in yeast cells.


1999 ◽  
Vol 277 (1) ◽  
pp. E144-E153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deborah L. Bella ◽  
Christine Hahn ◽  
Martha H. Stipanuk

To determine the role of nonsulfur vs. sulfur amino acids in regulation of cysteine metabolism, rats were fed a basal diet or diets supplemented with a mixture of nonsulfur amino acids (AA), sulfur amino acids (SAA), or both for 3 wk. Hepatic cysteine-sulfinate decarboxylase (CSDC), cysteine dioxygenase (CDO), and γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase (GCS) activity, concentration, and mRNA abundance were measured. Supplementation with AA alone had no effect on any of these measures. Supplementation of the basal diet with SAA, with or without AA, resulted in a higher CDO concentration (32–45 times basal), a lower CSDC mRNA level (49–64% of basal), and a lower GCS-heavy subunit mRNA level (70–76%). The presence of excess SAA and AA together resulted in an additional type of regulation: a lower specific activity of all three enzymes was observed in rats fed diets with an excess of AA and SAA. Both SAA and AA played a role in regulation of these three enzymes of cysteine metabolism, but SAA had the dominant effects, and effects of AA were not observed in the absence of SAA.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felipe-Andrés Piedra ◽  
Xueting Qiu ◽  
Michael N. Teng ◽  
Vasanthi Avadhanula ◽  
Annette A. Machado ◽  
...  

AbstractRespiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a nonsegmented negative-strand (NNS) RNA virus and a leading cause of severe lower respiratory tract illness in infants and the elderly. Transcription of the ten RSV genes proceeds sequentially from the 3’ promoter and requires conserved gene start (GS) and gene end (GE) signals. Previous studies using the prototypical GA1 genotype Long and A2 strains have indicated a gradient of gene transcription. However, recent reports show data that appear inconsistent with a gradient. To better understand RSV transcriptional regulation, mRNA abundances from five RSV genes were measured by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) in three cell lines and cotton rats infected with virus isolates belonging to four different genotypes (GA1, ON, GB1, BA). Relative mRNA levels reached steady-state between four and 24 hours post-infection. Steady-state patterns were genotype-specific and non-gradient, where mRNA levels from the G (attachment) gene exceeded those from the more promoter-proximal N (nucleocapsid) gene across isolates. Transcript stabilities could not account for the non-gradient patterns observed, indicating that relative mRNA levels more strongly reflect transcription than decay. While the GS signal sequences were highly conserved, their alignment with N protein in the helical ribonucleocapsid, i.e., N-phase, was variable, suggesting polymerase recognition of GS signal conformation affects transcription initiation. The effect of GS N-phase on transcription efficiency was tested using dicistronic minigenomes. Ratios of minigenome gene expression showed a switch-like dependence on N-phase with a period of seven nucleotides. Our results indicate that RSV gene expression is in part sculpted by polymerases that initiate transcription with a probability dependent on GS signal N-phase.Author SummaryRSV is a major viral pathogen that causes significant morbidity and mortality, especially in young children. Shortly after RSV enters a host cell, transcription from its nonsegmented negative-strand (NNS) RNA genome starts at the 3’ promoter and proceeds sequentially. Transcriptional attenuation is thought to occur at each gene junction, resulting in a gradient of gene expression. However, recent studies showing non-gradient levels of RSV mRNA suggest that transcriptional regulation may have additional mechanisms. We show using RSV isolates belonging to four different genotypes that gene expression is genotype-dependent and one gene (the G or attachment gene) is consistently more highly expressed than an upstream neighbor. We hypothesize that variable alignment of highly conserved gene start (GS) signals with nucleoprotein (i.e., variable GS N-phase) can affect transcription and give rise to non-gradient patterns of gene expression. We show using dicistronic RSV minigenomes wherein the reporter genes differ only in the N-phase of one GS signal that GS N-phase affects gene expression. Our results suggest the existence of a novel mechanism of transcriptional regulation that might play a role in other NNS RNA viruses.


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