Egr1 involvement in evening gene regulation by melatonin.

JM Fustin, H Dardente, GC Wagner, DA Carter, Jonathan D. Johnston, GA Lincoln, DG Hazlerigg

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Seasonal photoperiodic responses in mammals depend on the pineal hormone melatonin. The pars tuberalis (PT) region of the anterior pituitary has emerged as a principal melatonin target tissue, controlling endocrine responses. Rising melatonin levels acutely influence the expression of a small cluster of genes either positively (exemplified by cryptochrome‐1, cry1) or negatively (exemplified by the type 1 melatonin receptor, mt1 ). The purpose of this study was to characterize the pathways through which these evening actions of melatonin are mediated. In vitro experiments showed that cAMP signaling in the PT directly influences mt1 but not cry1 expression. Analysis of nuclear extracts from sheep PT tissue collected 90 min after melatonin or saline control injections highlighted the response element for the immediate early gene egr1 (EGR1‐RE) as a candidate for acute melatonin‐depen‐dent transcriptional regulation. We identified putative EGR1‐RE's in the proximal promoter regions of the ovine cry1 and mt1 genes, and confirmed their functionality in luciferase reporter assays. Egr1 expression is suppressed by melatonin in PT cell cultures, and is rhythmic in the ovine PT with a nadir in the early night. We propose that melatonin‐dependent effects on EGR1‐RE's contribute to evening gene expression profiles in this pituitary melatonin target tissue.— Fustin J. M., Dardente H., Wagner G. C., Carter D. A., Johnston J. D., Lincoln G. A., Hazlerigg D. G. Egr1 involvement in evening gene regulation by melatonin. FASEB J. 23, 764–773 (2009)
Original languageUndefined
Pages (from-to)764-773
Number of pages10
JournalFASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
Volume23
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19 Nov 2008

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