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Isolation, characterization and comparison of Atlantic and Chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2

BACKGROUND: Growth hormone (GH) is an important regulator of skeletal growth, as well as other adapted processes in salmonids. The GH gene (gh) in salmonids is represented by duplicated, non-allelic isoforms designated as gh1 and gh2. We have isolated and characterized gh-containing bacterial artifi...

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Autores principales: von Schalburg, Kristian R, Yazawa, Ryosuke, de Boer, Johan, Lubieniecki, Krzysztof P, Goh, Benjamin, Straub, Christopher A, Beetz-Sargent, Marianne R, Robb, Adrienne, Davidson, William S, Devlin, Robert H, Koop, Ben F
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2584663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18980692
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-9-522
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author von Schalburg, Kristian R
Yazawa, Ryosuke
de Boer, Johan
Lubieniecki, Krzysztof P
Goh, Benjamin
Straub, Christopher A
Beetz-Sargent, Marianne R
Robb, Adrienne
Davidson, William S
Devlin, Robert H
Koop, Ben F
author_facet von Schalburg, Kristian R
Yazawa, Ryosuke
de Boer, Johan
Lubieniecki, Krzysztof P
Goh, Benjamin
Straub, Christopher A
Beetz-Sargent, Marianne R
Robb, Adrienne
Davidson, William S
Devlin, Robert H
Koop, Ben F
author_sort von Schalburg, Kristian R
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Growth hormone (GH) is an important regulator of skeletal growth, as well as other adapted processes in salmonids. The GH gene (gh) in salmonids is represented by duplicated, non-allelic isoforms designated as gh1 and gh2. We have isolated and characterized gh-containing bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs) of both Atlantic and Chinook salmon (Salmo salar and Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in order to further elucidate our understanding of the conservation and regulation of these loci. RESULTS: BACs containing gh1 and gh2 from both Atlantic and Chinook salmon were assembled, annotated, and compared to each other in their coding, intronic, regulatory, and flanking regions. These BACs also contain the genes for skeletal muscle sodium channel oriented in the same direction. The sequences of the genes for interferon alpha-1, myosin alkali light chain and microtubule associated protein Tau were also identified, and found in opposite orientations relative to gh1 and gh2. Viability of each of these genes was examined by PCR. We show that transposon insertions have occurred differently in the promoters of gh, within and between each species. Other differences within the promoters and intronic and 3'-flanking regions of the four gh genes provide evidence that they have distinct regulatory modes and possibly act to function differently and/or during different times of salmonid development. CONCLUSION: A core proximal promoter for transcription of both gh1 and gh2 is conserved between the two species of salmon. Nevertheless, transposon integration and regulatory element differences do exist between the promoters of gh1 and gh2. Additionally, organization of transposon families into the BACs containing gh1 and for the BACs containing gh2, are very similar within orthologous regions, but much less clear conservation is apparent in comparisons between the gh1- and gh2-containing paralogous BACs for the two fish species. This is consistent with the hypothesis that a burst of transposition activity occurred during the speciation events which led to Atlantic and Pacific salmon. The Chinook and other Oncorhynchus GH1s are strikingly different in comparison to the other GHs and this change is not apparent in the surrounding non-coding sequences.
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spelling pubmed-25846632008-11-19 Isolation, characterization and comparison of Atlantic and Chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2 von Schalburg, Kristian R Yazawa, Ryosuke de Boer, Johan Lubieniecki, Krzysztof P Goh, Benjamin Straub, Christopher A Beetz-Sargent, Marianne R Robb, Adrienne Davidson, William S Devlin, Robert H Koop, Ben F BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Growth hormone (GH) is an important regulator of skeletal growth, as well as other adapted processes in salmonids. The GH gene (gh) in salmonids is represented by duplicated, non-allelic isoforms designated as gh1 and gh2. We have isolated and characterized gh-containing bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs) of both Atlantic and Chinook salmon (Salmo salar and Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in order to further elucidate our understanding of the conservation and regulation of these loci. RESULTS: BACs containing gh1 and gh2 from both Atlantic and Chinook salmon were assembled, annotated, and compared to each other in their coding, intronic, regulatory, and flanking regions. These BACs also contain the genes for skeletal muscle sodium channel oriented in the same direction. The sequences of the genes for interferon alpha-1, myosin alkali light chain and microtubule associated protein Tau were also identified, and found in opposite orientations relative to gh1 and gh2. Viability of each of these genes was examined by PCR. We show that transposon insertions have occurred differently in the promoters of gh, within and between each species. Other differences within the promoters and intronic and 3'-flanking regions of the four gh genes provide evidence that they have distinct regulatory modes and possibly act to function differently and/or during different times of salmonid development. CONCLUSION: A core proximal promoter for transcription of both gh1 and gh2 is conserved between the two species of salmon. Nevertheless, transposon integration and regulatory element differences do exist between the promoters of gh1 and gh2. Additionally, organization of transposon families into the BACs containing gh1 and for the BACs containing gh2, are very similar within orthologous regions, but much less clear conservation is apparent in comparisons between the gh1- and gh2-containing paralogous BACs for the two fish species. This is consistent with the hypothesis that a burst of transposition activity occurred during the speciation events which led to Atlantic and Pacific salmon. The Chinook and other Oncorhynchus GH1s are strikingly different in comparison to the other GHs and this change is not apparent in the surrounding non-coding sequences. BioMed Central 2008-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2584663/ /pubmed/18980692 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-9-522 Text en Copyright © 2008 von Schalburg et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
von Schalburg, Kristian R
Yazawa, Ryosuke
de Boer, Johan
Lubieniecki, Krzysztof P
Goh, Benjamin
Straub, Christopher A
Beetz-Sargent, Marianne R
Robb, Adrienne
Davidson, William S
Devlin, Robert H
Koop, Ben F
Isolation, characterization and comparison of Atlantic and Chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2
title Isolation, characterization and comparison of Atlantic and Chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2
title_full Isolation, characterization and comparison of Atlantic and Chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2
title_fullStr Isolation, characterization and comparison of Atlantic and Chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2
title_full_unstemmed Isolation, characterization and comparison of Atlantic and Chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2
title_short Isolation, characterization and comparison of Atlantic and Chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2
title_sort isolation, characterization and comparison of atlantic and chinook salmon growth hormone 1 and 2
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2584663/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18980692
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-9-522
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