JOURNAL ARTICLE

Differential expression of human placental growth-hormone variant and chorionic somatomammotropin in culture

Barbara E. NickelElissavet KardamiPeter A. Cattini

Year: 1990 Journal:   Biochemical Journal Vol: 267 (3)Pages: 653-658   Publisher: Portland Press

Abstract

Regulation of human placental growth-hormone variant (hGH-V) in the presence of its own promoter has been studied. At term, 10-20% of placental mRNA is specific for chorionic somatomammotropin (hCS-A and -B) compared with 0.05% hGH-V, yet these genes show more than 90% sequence similarity at the nucleotide level. By using stable gene transfer of intact hGH-V and hCS-A genes into rat pituitary (GC) cells, synthesis and release of hGH-V and hCS are detected. This suggests that hGH-V as well as hCS is secreted during pregnancy. The hCS-A mRNA level is higher than that observed from the hGH-V gene in stably transfected GC cells. Also, a hybrid gene containing hGH-V 5′-flanking DNA was less active than a hybrid hCS-A gene containing equivalent sequences after transient transfection of these cells. This correlates with the binding of a known transcription factor to a proximal region (-97/-66) of the hCS-A promoter, and not the equivalent hGH-V gene sequences. These results indicate that differential expression of hGH-V and hCS in GC cells is related, in part, to the strength of their respective promoters, and suggest a similar mechanism may exist in the placenta.

Keywords:
Human growth hormone Growth hormone Differential (mechanical device) Biology Endocrinology Hormone Internal medicine Medicine Physics

Metrics

44
Cited By
6.26
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
36
Refs
0.96
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Obstetrics and Gynecology
Birth, Development, and Health
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Growth Hormone and Insulin-like Growth Factors
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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