Brain Somatostatin Receptors Are Up-Regulated In Somatostatin-Deficient Mice
Author(s) -
José Luis Ramı́rez,
Rania Mouchantaf,
Ujendra Kumar,
Veronica Otero Corchon,
Marcelo Rubinstein,
Malcolm J. Low,
Yogesh Patel
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
molecular endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1944-9917
pISSN - 0888-8809
DOI - 10.1210/me.2002-0068
Subject(s) - somatostatin receptor 1 , somatostatin , somatostatin receptor , biology , somatostatin receptor 2 , somatostatin receptor 3 , immunocytochemistry , endocrinology , medicine , neuropeptide , receptor , gene expression , messenger rna , knockout mouse , gene , biochemistry
The peptide somatostatin (SST) is widely synthesized in the brain and periphery and acts through a family of five receptors (SSTR1-5) to exert numerous effects. A gene product related to SST, cortistatin (CST), also interacts with SSTR1-5. Here we have investigated the regulation of SSTR1-5 and of CST in SST knockout (SSTKO) mice. The five SSTRs were quantitated individually by subtype-selective binding analysis, by immunocytochemistry, and by mRNA measurement and showed, in the brain of SSTKO mice, up-regulation of subtypes 1, 2, 4, and 5, and down-regulation of SSTR3. Peripheral tissues displayed both subtype- and tissue-specific changes in SSTR1-5 mRNA levels of expression. Lack of SST did not up-regulate normal CST expression in brain nor did it induce its expression in the periphery. SST-like immunoreactivity, however, was induced in the proximal midgut in SSTKO animals, suggesting intestinal expression of a novel SST-like gene.
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