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Endocrinology, Vol 137, 1233-1241, Copyright © 1996 by Endocrine Society
ARTICLES |
LP Pu, W Ma, JL Barker and YP Loh
Section on Cellular Neurobiology, Laboratory of Developmental Neurobiology, National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
Pro-TRH is cleaved at paired basic residues to yield five copies of TRH and cryptic peptides. Recent studies have shown that the prohormone convertases, PC1 and PC2, can process pro-TRH correctly. To determine whether these two enzymes could play a role in pro-TRH processing in vivo, the regional and cellular colocalization of pro-TRH messenger RNA (mRNA) with the mRNAs encoding the prohormone convertases PC1 and PC2 was examined in rat brain, using in situ hybridization histochemistry. Differential regional distribution of pro-TRH mRNA with PC1 and/or PC2 mRNA was found in several brain regions. For example, in the olfactory regions, there was coexpression of pro-TRH mRNA in the glomerular layer with PC2 mRNA, but not PC1 mRNA, whereas in the tenia tecta, coexpression of pro-TRH and PC1 mRNAs was evident, but PC2 mRNA was absent. Pro-TRH mRNA in the paraventricular nucleus was coexpressed with both PC1 and PC2 mRNAs, whereas the basal lateral hypothalamus showed coexistence of pro-TRH mRNA with PC2 mRNA, but not PC1 mRNA. Interestingly, pro-TRH was expressed in the thalamic reticular nucleus, but neither PC1 nor PC2 was detectable in this region. Cellular colocalization studies using double in situ hybridization histochemistry showed the presence of PC2 mRNA in the pro-TRH neurons of the olfactory glomerular layer and basal lateral hypothalamus, and PC1 mRNA in the pro-TRH neurons in the paraventricular nucleus. These results suggest that PC1 and PC2 are enzyme candidates for the processing of pro-TRH in vivo. Moreover, the differential distribution of PC1 and PC2 mRNAs with pro-TRH mRNA may be responsible for the differential processing of this prohormone in the central nervous system. The absence of PC1 and PC2 mRNAs in certain TRH neurons raises the possibility that prohormone convertases other than PC1 and PC2 may be involved in the processing of brain pro-TRH.
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