Vasopressin Gene Expression in the Rodent Hypothalamus: Transcriptional and Posttranscriptional Responses to Physiological Stimulation
Open Access
- 1 July 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Endocrine Society in Molecular Endocrinology
- Vol. 4 (7) , 1051-1059
- https://doi.org/10.1210/mend-4-7-1051
Abstract
The neuropeptide vasopressin (VP) is expressed in the supraoptic nucleus, a discrete group of neurons in the hypothalamus that respond to osmotic stimuli. In the rat the pattern of expression of VP mRNA changes in two ways as a consequence of the physiological stimulation of these neurons. Firstly, there is an accumulation of VP mRNA, and secondly, the poly(A) tail of the VP mRNA increases in length. We asked whether the increase in VP mRNA level is a consequence of transcriptional or posttranscriptional mechanisms. We present evidence from nuclear run-on assays that increases in the transcription of the rat VP gene are sufficient to account for the accumulation of VP mRNA observed in chronically stimulated animals. However, we note that in acutely stimulated animals there are rapid and relatively large increases in VP gene transcription that do not correlate with increases in the VP mRNA level, but coincide with the appearance of a homogeneous class of VP mRNAs with elongated poly(A) tails. We suggest that immediately after the onset of an acute osmotic stimulus, there is a rapid destruction of preexisting VP mRNAs and their replacement with new transcripts bearing longer poly(A) tails. We have also addressed the question of the function of the elongated VP mRNA poly(A) tail. It is unlikely that the poly(A) tail extension is involved in RNA stability; the transcriptional changes observed are sufficient to account for the increase in VP mRNA level, and we show that in the mouse similar increases in VP mRNA level are observed without concomitant changes in poly(A) tail length. We did not observe a change in the polysome distribution of the VP mRNA after osmotic stimulation. The elongated poly(A) tail of the VP mRNA may be involved in translational regulation or intracellular compartmentalization.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulation of poly(A) tail size of vasopressin mRNA.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1988
- The vasopressin gene is expressed prior to regulation in the supraoptic nuclei of fetal ratsBrain Research, 1988
- The vasopressin mRNA poly(A) tract is unusually long and increases during stimulation of vasopressin gene expression in vivo.Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1988
- A single rat genomic DNA fragment encodes both the oxytocin and vasopressin genes separated by 11 kilobases and oriented in opposite transcriptional directionsBiochimie, 1988
- Vasopressin, oxytocin, dynorphin, enkephalin and corticotrophin‐releasing factor mRNA stimulation in the rat.The Journal of Physiology, 1987
- Developmental and transformation-sensitive expression of the Sparc gene on mouse chromosome 11.The EMBO Journal, 1986
- Structure of the murine Thy-1 gene.The EMBO Journal, 1985
- Translational regulation and deadenylation of a protamine mRNA during spermiogenesis in the mouseDevelopmental Biology, 1984
- Sequence of a cDNA clone encoding mouse glial fibrillary acidic protein: structural conservation of intermediate filaments.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1984
- Biosynthesis and axonal transport of rat neurohypophysial proteins and peptides.The Journal of cell biology, 1977