The Relationship of the Estrogen Receptor to the Induction of Vitellogenin in Chicken and Xenopus Liver |
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Authors: | BRUCE WESTLEY |
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Institution: | Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QU, England |
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Abstract: | The mechanisms involved in the regulation of gene expression in eukaryote cells, although an area of active research, are still largely unknown. This is at least partly due to the lack of good experimental model systems. One type of system which is being exploited with some considerable success is the induction of proteins by steroid hormones. Studies on the effects of estrogen and progesterone on the synthesis of the egg white proteins in the chick oviduct, for instance, have yielded substantial insight into both the regulation of protein synthesis by steroid hormones 1] and the arrangement of the DNA sequences coding for these proteins 2, 3]. The need for other good inducible systems clearly exists and the induction of vitellogenin, the precursor of the major egg yolk proteins, by estrogen in the livers of the chicken and frog ( Xenopus laevis ) is one that is attracting increasing interest. In common with the chick oviduct, large amounts of a specific protein are synthesised in response to a well defined hormonal stimulus. However, the induction of vitellogenin also has the advantage that the response is not complicated by the extensive hyperplasia that follows estrogen treatment in the chick oviduct 4, 5] and that vitellogenin may be induced in vitro 6–11]. The aims of this review are first to discuss recent data on the induction of vitellogenin and vitellogenin mRNA both in vivo and in vitro and then to relate this data to the properties of the estrogen receptor, present in chicken and Xenopus liver, which is thought to mediate the induction of vitellogenin by estrogen. |
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