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Three urocortins in medaka: identification and spatial expression in the central nervous system
Author(s) -
Hosono K.,
Yamashita J.,
Kikuchi Y.,
HirakiKajiyama T.,
Okubo K.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of neuroendocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.062
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1365-2826
pISSN - 0953-8194
DOI - 10.1111/jne.12472
Subject(s) - central nervous system , identification (biology) , biology , neuroscience , locomotor activity , medicine , endocrinology , ecology
The urocortin ( UCN ) group of neuropeptides includes urocortin 1/sauvagine/urotensin 1 ( UTS 1), urocortin 2 ( UCN 2) and urocortin 3 ( UCN 3). In recent years, evidence has accumulated showing that UCN s play pivotal roles in mediating stress response and anxiety in mammals. Evidence has also emerged regarding the evolutionary conservation of UCN s in vertebrates, but very little information is available about UCN s in non‐mammalian vertebrates. Indeed, at present, there are no reports of the empirical identification of ucn2 in non‐mammalian vertebrates or of the distribution of ucn2 and ucn3 expression in the adult central nervous system ( CNS ) of these animals. To gain insight into the evolutionary nature of UCN s in vertebrates, we cloned uts1 , ucn2 and ucn3 in a teleost fish, medaka and examined the spatial expression of these genes in the adult brain and spinal cord. Although all known UCN 2 genes except those in rodents have been reported to likely lack the necessary structural features to produce a functional pre‐pro‐protein, all three UCN genes in medaka, including ucn2 , displayed all of these features, suggesting their functionality. The three UCN genes exhibited distinct spatial expression patterns in the medaka brain: uts1 was primarily expressed in broad regions of the dorsal telencephalon, ucn2 was expressed in restricted regions of the thalamus and brainstem and ucn3 was expressed in discrete nuclei throughout many regions of the brain. We also found that these genes were all expressed throughout the medaka spinal cord, each with a distinct spatial pattern. Given that many of these regions have been implicated in stress responses and anxiety, the three UCN s may serve distinct physiological roles in the medaka CNS , including those involved in stress and anxiety, as shown in the mammalian CNS .