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Publication : Differential expression of syntrophins and analysis of alternatively spliced dystrophin transcripts in the mouse brain.

First Author  Górecki DC Year  1997
Journal  Eur J Neurosci Volume  9
Issue  5 Pages  965-76
PubMed ID  9182949 Mgi Jnum  J:42318
Mgi Id  MGI:1095580 Doi  10.1111/j.1460-9568.1997.tb01447.x
Citation  Gorecki DC, et al. (1997) Differential expression of syntrophins and analysis of alternatively spliced dystrophin transcripts in the mouse brain. Eur J Neurosci 9(5):965-76
abstractText  Expression of syntrophin genes, encoding members of the dystrophin-associated protein complex, was studied in the mouse brain. In the hippocampal formation there is distinctive co-localization of specific syntrophins with certain dystrophin isoforms in neurons, e.g. alpha1-syntrophin with the C-dystrophin in CA regions and beta2-syntrophin with the G-dystrophin in the dentate gyrus. Expression of the alpha1-syntrophin is predominant in CA regions and the olfactory bulb and it is also present in the cerebral cortex and the dentate gyrus. The beta2-syntrophin mRNA is most abundant in the dentate gyrus and is also evident in the pituitary, the cerebral cortex and in Ammon's horn and in traces in the caudate putamen. The choroid plexus was labelled by both alpha1- and beta2-syntrophin-specific probes. The expression of syntrophins in the brain correlates with expression of dystrophins and dystroglycan. There are brain areas such as the cerebral cortex where several different syntrophins and dystrophins are expressed together. Syntrophin expression co-localizes with utrophin in the choroid plexus and caudate putamen. Finally, no syntrophin was detected in the cerebellar Purkinje cells where the specific dystrophin isoform (P-type) is present. This specific distribution of syntrophins in the brain is particularly interesting, as muscle syntrophin interacts with neuronal nitric oxide synthase. This may suggest that the dystrophin-associated protein complex may be involved in synaptic organisation and signal transduction machinery in both muscle and neurons. The dystrophin isoform, with exons 71-74 spliced out and hence lacking syntrophin binding sites, had been believed to be predominant in the brain, but our analyses using in situ hybridization, S1 nuclease protection and the semi-quantitative polymerase chain reaction revealed that this alternatively spliced mRNA is a minor, low abundance form in the brain.
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