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Apolipoprotein gene expression in the rabbit: abundance, size, and distribution of apolipoprotein mRNA species in different tissues
Authors:C Lenich  P Brecher  S Makrides  A Chobanian  V I Zannis
Institution:Department of Medicine, Boston University Medical Center, MA 02118.
Abstract:We have used human apolipoprotein cDNAs as hybridization probes to study the relative abundance and distribution of apolipoprotein mRNAs in rabbit tissues by RNA blotting analysis. The tissues surveyed included liver, intestine, lung, pancreas, spleen, stomach, skeletal muscle, testis, heart, kidney, adrenal, aorta, and brain. We found that liver is the sole or major site of synthesis of apoA-II, apoA-IV, apoB, apoC-I, apoC-II, apoC-III, and apoE, and the intestine is a major site of synthesis of apoA-I, apoA-IV, and apoB. Minor sites of apolipoprotein mRNA synthesis were as follows: apoA-I, liver and skeletal muscle; apoA-IV, spleen and lung; apoB, kidney; apoC-II and apoC-III, intestine. ApoE mRNA was detected in all tissues surveyed with the exception of skeletal muscle. Sites with moderate apoE mRNA (10% of the liver value) were lung, brain, spleen, stomach, and testis. All rabbit mRNAs had forms with sizes comparable to their human counterparts. In addition, hybridization of hepatic and intestinal RNA with human apoA-IV and apoB probes produced a second hybridization band of approximately 2.4 and 8 kb, respectively. Similarly, hybridization of rabbit intestinal RNA with human apoC-II produced a hybridization band of 1.8 kb. The 8 kb apoB mRNA form may correspond to the apoB-48 mRNA, whereas the apoA-IV- and apoC-II-related mRNA species have not been described previously. This study provides a comprehensive survey of the sites of apolipoprotein gene expression and shows numerous differences in both the abundance and the tissue distribution of several apolipoprotein mRNAs between rabbit and human tissues. These findings and the observation of potentially new apolipoprotein mRNA species are important for our understanding of the cis and trans acting factors that confer tissue specificity as well as factors that regulate the expression of apolipoprotein genes in different mammalian species.
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