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Discovery of Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase‐Activating Polypeptide‐Regulated Genes through Microarray Analyses in Cell Culture and In Vivo
Author(s) -
Eiden Lee E.,
Samal Babru,
Gerdin Matthew J.,
Mustafa Tomris,
Vaudry David,
Stroth Nikolas
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
annals of the new york academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.712
H-Index - 248
eISSN - 1749-6632
pISSN - 0077-8923
DOI - 10.1196/annals.1418.019
Subject(s) - biology , signal transduction , microbiology and biotechnology , gene silencing , microarray analysis techniques , gene expression , gene , biochemistry
Pituitary adenylate cyclase‐activating polypeptide (PACAP) is an evolutionarily well conserved neuropeptide with multiple functions in the nervous, endocrine, and immune systems. PACAP provides neuroprotection from ischemia and toxin exposure, is anti‐inflammatory in gastric inflammatory disease and sepsis, controls proliferative signaling pathways involved in neural cell transformation, and modulates glucohomeostasis. PACAP‐based, disease‐targeted therapeutics might thus be both effective and benign, enhancing homeostatic responses to behavioral, metabolic, oncogenic, and inflammatory stressors. PACAP signal transduction employs synergistic regulation of calcium and cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), and noncanonical activation of both calcium‐ and cAMP‐dependent processes. Pharmacological activation of PACAP signaling should consequently have highly specific effects even in vivo . Here, a combined cellular biochemical, pharmacologic, transcriptomic, and bioinformatic approach to understanding PACAP signal transduction by identifying PACAP target genes with oligonucleotide‐ and cDNA‐based microarray is described. Calcium‐ and cAMP‐dependent PACAP signaling pathways for regulation of genes encoding proteins required for neuritogenesis, changes in cell morphology, and cell survival have been traced in PC12 cells. Pharmacological experiments have linked gene expression to cell physiological responses in this system, in which gene silencing can also be employed to confirm the functional significance of induction of specific transcripts. Differential transcriptional responses to metabolic, ischemic, and other stressors in wild type compared to PACAP‐deficient mice establish in principle which PACAP‐responsive transcripts in culture are PACAP‐dependent in vivo . Bioinformatic approaches aid in creating a pipeline for identifying neuropeptide‐regulated genes, validating their cellular functions, and defining their expression in the context of neuropeptide signaling physiology, required for discovery of new targets for drug action.

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