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Diverse tissue expression of rat alpha 2-adrenergic receptor genes.
Author(s) -
Diane E. Handy,
C S Flordellis,
Natalia Bogdanova,
Margaret Bresnahan,
Haralambos Gavras
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
hypertension
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.986
H-Index - 265
eISSN - 1524-4563
pISSN - 0194-911X
DOI - 10.1161/01.hyp.21.6.861
Subject(s) - complementary dna , biology , alpha 1b adrenergic receptor , interleukin 5 receptor alpha subunit , microbiology and biotechnology , alpha 1d adrenergic receptor , gene , alpha (finance) , gene expression , in situ hybridization , receptor , interleukin 10 receptor, alpha subunit , adrenergic receptor , messenger rna , g alpha subunit , beta 3 adrenergic receptor , genetics , protein subunit , medicine , construct validity , nursing , patient satisfaction
Previously, we have reported two major alpha 2-adrenergic receptor transcripts in rat brain of 3.8 and 3.0 kb and the cloning and characterization of the rat brain complementary DNA (cDNA) (RB alpha 2C) specific for the 3.0-kb messenger RNA. In this report, we used rat brain cDNAs specific for the 3.0 and 3.8 kb transcripts, which encode the alpha 2C- and alpha 2A-adrenergic receptors, respectively, and the RNG alpha 2 cDNA, which encodes for the nonglycosylated alpha 2B-adrenergic receptor in rat, to study tissue-specific expression of the three alpha 2-adrenergic receptor genes in rat. To eliminate cross-hybridization of probes with transcripts from other alpha 2 genes, we subcloned fragments that encode for the highly divergent third cytoplasmic loop of each rat alpha 2-adrenergic receptor cDNA and used RNase protection analysis to detect specific transcripts. We show that the three rat alpha 2-adrenergic receptor genes have diverse patterns of tissue expression, and although transcripts specific for each alpha 2-adrenergic receptor gene are found in brain and kidney, the levels of expression of each subtype differ in these tissues. We speculate on the significance of tissue-specific expression of the alpha 2-adrenergic receptor genes.

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