Dietary Selenium Stabilizes Glutathione Peroxidase mRNA in Rat Liver

Abstract
The objective of these studies was to determine the step at which dietary selenium (Se) regulates the pre-translational expression of the gene for cytosolic Se-glutathione peroxidase (Se-GPX) in rat liver. Weanling male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a Torula yeast-based Se-deficient diet, or the same diet supplemented with 0.5 mg/kg as Na2SeO3, for at least 40 d. Livers were excised and divided into three portions for isolation of nuclei, for purification of total RNA and for assay of Se-GPX activity. Nuclei were used in run-on transcription assays and for isolation of total nuclear RNA. Nuclear RNA and total liver RNA were probed with segments from a rat Se-GPX cDNA in Northern blot and slot blot assays. Despite marked differences in Se-GPX activity, there were no significant differences between dietary groups in the transcription rates of the Se-GPX gene. Species hybridizing to Se-GPX were not detected in nuclear RNA. However, steady state levels of Se-GPX mRNA were markedly reduced by Se deficiency. These results suggest that dietary Se exerts its effect on pretranslational Se-GPX gene expression at the level of cytosolic mRNA stabilization.