Organization of the Mouse Ghrelin Gene and Promoter: Occurrence of a Short Noncoding First Exon
Ghrelin is a growth hormone-releasing peptide recently discovered in the stomach of rat and human as an endogenous ligand for growth hormone-secretagogue receptor. In the present study, a full-length cDNA for mouse ghrelin has been cloned from the stomach using the oligo-capping and rapid amplificat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Endocrinology (Philadelphia) 2001-08, Vol.142 (8), p.3697-3700 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Ghrelin is a growth hormone-releasing peptide recently discovered
in the stomach of rat and human as an endogenous ligand for growth
hormone-secretagogue receptor. In the present study, a full-length cDNA
for mouse ghrelin has been cloned from the stomach using the
oligo-capping and rapid amplification methods, and the organization of
its gene and promoter has been analyzed. The mouse ghrelin cDNA was 521
bp long, consisting of 44 bp 5’-noncoding region, 354 bp coding region
encoding a pre-proghrelin composed of 117 amino acid residues and 123
bp 3’-noncoding region. The genomic sequence analysis has revealed
that the mouse ghrelin gene consists of 5 exons and 4 introns. The
first exon was revealed to be only 19 bp long presented at the
noncoding region of cDNA. The identical 19 bp sequence was also found
as the first exon at the 5’-end of full-length rat ghrelin cDNA
obtained from the stomach. A TATA box-like sequence, TATATAA was
localized 24 bp upstream of the transcription start site of the mouse
ghrelin gene. The sequence of the 5’-promoter region of mouse ghrelin
gene including the TATA-like sequence and short exon 1 was highly
homologous to that of reported human ghrelin gene. These findings
suggest that the structure of the promoter region including the short
noncoding first exon and its transcriptional regulation are conserved
among the mammalian ghrelin genes. |
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ISSN: | 0013-7227 1945-7170 |
DOI: | 10.1210/endo.142.8.8433 |