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Research Communications |
Department of Physiology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EG; and
a Department of Cellular Physiology, The Babraham Institute, Babraham, Cambridge CB2 4AT
The developmental and tissue-specific regulation of growth hormone receptor (GHR) mRNA expression is complex and involves alternate leader exon usage. The transcript composition of hepatic GHR mRNA has therefore been determined in fetal sheep during late gestation and after experimental manipulation of fetal plasma cortisol levels by fetal adrenalectomy and exogenous cortisol infusion, using RNase protection assays and a riboprobe containing exons 1A, 2, and 3 of the ovine GHR gene. Expression of the adult liver-specific GHR mRNA transcript containing exon 1A was not detected earlier than 138 days of gestation (term 145 ±2 days). Thereafter, expression of this leader exon increased and accounted for 2530% of the total GHR mRNA in the fetal liver at term. Hepatic GHR mRNA derived from leader exons other than 1A was detectable at 97 days and increased in abundance toward term in parallel with the normal prepartum rise in fetal plasma cortisol. Abolition of this cortisol surge by fetal adrenalectomy prevented both the activation of exon 1A expression and the prepartum rise in GHR mRNA derived from the other leader exons in fetal ovine liver. Conversely, raising cortisol levels by exogenous infusion earlier in gestation prematurely activated exon 1A expression and enhanced the abundance of GHR mRNA transcripts derived from the other leader exons. Cortisol therefore appears to activate the adult mode of GHR gene expression in fetal ovine liver during late gestation. These observations have important implications for the maturation of the somatotrophic axis and for the onset of GH-dependent growth after birth.Li, J., Gilmour, R. S., Saunders, J. C., Dauncey, M. J., Fowden, A. L. Activation of the adult mode of ovine growth hormone receptor (GHR) gene expression by cortisol during late fetal development.
1 Correspondence: Department of Physiology, University of Cambridge, Downing St., Cambridge CB2 3EG, U.K. E-mail: alf1000{at}cam.ac._k
2 Present address: Department of Molecular Medicine, Auckland University School of Medicine, Auckland, New Zealand.
Key Words: fetus GHR fetal plasma cortisol GH binding riboprobe insulin-like growth factor glucocorticoid response element
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