Tissue-specific expression of squirrel monkey chorionic gonadotropin.
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ABSTRACT: Pituitary gonadotropins LH and FSH play central roles in reproductive function. In Old World primates, LH stimulates ovulation in females and testosterone production in males. Recent studies have found that squirrel monkeys and other New World primates lack expression of LH in the pituitary. Instead, chorionic gonadotropin (CG), which is normally only expressed in the placenta of Old World primates, is the active luteotropic pituitary hormone in these animals. The goal of this study was to investigate the tissue-specific regulation of squirrel monkey CG. We isolated the squirrel monkey CG? gene and promoter from genomic DNA from squirrel monkey B-lymphoblasts and compared the promoter sequence to that of the common marmoset, another New World primate, and human and rhesus macaque CG? and LH?. Using reporter gene assays, we found that a squirrel monkey CG? promoter fragment (-1898/+9) is active in both mouse pituitary L?T2 and human placenta JEG3 cells, but not in rat adrenal PC12 cells. Furthermore, within this construct separate cis-elements are responsible for pituitary- and placenta-specific expression. Pituitary-specific expression is governed by Egr-1 binding sites in the proximal 250 bp of the promoter, whereas placenta-specific expression is controlled by AP-2 sites further upstream. Thus, selective expression of the squirrel monkey CG? promoter in pituitary and placental cells is governed by distinct cis-elements that exhibit homology with human LH? and marmoset CG? promoters, respectively.
SUBMITTER: Vasauskas AA
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3022102 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Feb
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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