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Publication : Expression and role of the ether-à-go-go-related (MERG1A) potassium-channel protein during preimplantation mouse development.

First Author  Winston NJ Year  2004
Journal  Biol Reprod Volume  70
Issue  4 Pages  1070-9
PubMed ID  14668215 Mgi Jnum  J:89383
Mgi Id  MGI:3040012 Doi  10.1095/biolreprod.103.020917
Citation  Winston NJ, et al. (2004) Expression and role of the ether-a-go-go-related (MERG1A) potassium-channel protein during preimplantation mouse development. Biol Reprod 70(4):1070-9
abstractText  Potassium channels play important roles in many cellular processes, including cell-cycle progression and cell differentiation. In the present study, we investigated the pattern of expression of the mouse ether-a-go-go-related (KCNH2; MERG1A) potassium channel during mouse embryogenic development. Analysis by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction revealed maternal MERG1A transcripts until the late 2-cell stage of development, after which MERG1A expression from the zygotic genome was low until the 8-cell stage, then rose in the morula, but was low in trophoblast compared to inner cell mass cells. A trophoblast stem cell line also was shown to express MERG1A mRNA. Immunoblotting of oocytes, blastocysts, and the trophoblast stem cell line revealed different posttranslationally processed forms of MERG1A. Immunofluorescence analysis showed that the subcellular localization of MERG1A varied at different stages of the embryogenic cell cycle. In addition, MERG1A protein levels increased following compaction at the 8-cell stage, and its distribution became polarized. This relocalization of MERG1A was affected by treatment with specific inhibitors of ether-a-go-go-related gene (ERG)-channel function and of actin polymerization. Puromycin treatment of morulae indicated that membrane-associated MERG1A had a half-life of greater than 24 h. The ERG-specific inhibitor E-4031 reduced the incidence of blastocyst formation and the number of cells per blastocyst. These results show that MERG1A is developmentally regulated and suggest that it might play a role in early mouse embryogenic development.
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