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Publication : Mechanisms of compartmentalized expression of Mrg class G-protein-coupled sensory receptors.

First Author  Liu Y Year  2008
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  28
Issue  1 Pages  125-32
PubMed ID  18171930 Mgi Jnum  J:131052
Mgi Id  MGI:3772745 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4472-07.2008
Citation  Liu Y, et al. (2008) Mechanisms of compartmentalized expression of Mrg class G-protein-coupled sensory receptors. J Neurosci 28(1):125-32
abstractText  Mrg class G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are expressed exclusively in sensory neurons in the trigeminal and dorsal root ganglia. Pharmacological activation of Mrg proteins is capable of modulating sensory neuron activities and elicits nociceptive effects. In this study, we illustrate a control mechanism that allows the Runx1 runt domain transcription factor to generate compartmentalized expression of these sensory GPCRs. Expression of MrgA, MrgB, and MrgC subclasses is confined to an 'A/B/C' neuronal compartment that expresses Runx1 transiently (or does not express Runx1), whereas MrgD expression is restricted to a 'D' compartment with persistent Runx1 expression. Runx1 is initially required for the expression of all Mrg genes. However, during late development Runx1 becomes a repressor for MrgA/B/C genes. As a result, MrgA/B/C expression persists only in the Runx1- 'A/B/C' compartment. In delta446 mice, in which Runx1 lacks the C-terminal repression domain, expression of MrgA/B/C genes is dramatically expanded into the Runx1+ 'D' compartment. MrgD expression, however, is resistant to Runx1-mediated repression in the 'D' compartment. Therefore, the creation of Runx1+ and Runx1- compartments, in conjunction with different responses of Mrg genes to Runx1-mediated repression, results in the compartmentalized expression of MrgA/B/C versus MrgD genes. Within the MrgA/B/C compartment, MrgB4-expressing neurons innervate exclusively the hairy skin. Here we found that Smad4, a downstream component of bone morphological protein-mediated signaling, is required selectively for the expression of MrgB4. Our study suggests a new line of evidence that specification of sensory subtypes is established progressively during perinatal and postnatal development.
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