The Expression of Hypoxia-Induced Gene 1 (Higd1a) in the Central Nervous System of Male and Female Rats Differs According to Age
Autor: | Patricia Lagos, L. Lopez, María José Zuluaga, Daniella Agrati, Gabriela Bedó |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Central Nervous System Male Cell type Central nervous system Physiology Biology 03 medical and health sciences Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Diencephalon 0302 clinical medicine Gene expression medicine Animals Rats Wistar HIGD1A Gene Expression Regulation Developmental General Medicine Spinal cord Neoplasm Proteins Rats Sexual dimorphism 030104 developmental biology medicine.anatomical_structure Female Nucleus 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Journal of molecular neuroscience : MN. 66(3) |
ISSN: | 1559-1166 |
Popis: | HIGD1A (hypoxia-induced gene domain protein-1a), a mitochondrial inner membrane protein present in various cell types, has been mainly associated with anti-apoptotic processes in response to stressors. Our previous findings have shown that Higd1a mRNA is widely expressed across the central nervous system (CNS), exhibiting an increasing expression in the spinal cord from postnatal day 1 (P1) to 15 (P15) and changes in the distribution pattern from P1 to P90. During the first weeks of postnatal life, the great plasticity of the CNS is accompanied by cell death/survival decisions. So we first describe HIGD1A expression throughout the brain during early postnatal life in female and male pups. Secondly, based on the fact that in some areas this process is influenced by the sex of individuals, we explore HIGD1A expression in the sexual dimorphic nucleus (SDN) of the medial preoptic area, a region that is several folds larger in male than in female rats, partly due to sex differences in the process of apoptosis during this period. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that HIGD1A is widely but unevenly expressed throughout the brain. Quantitative Western blot analysis of the parietal cortex, diencephalon, and spinal cord from both sexes at P1, P5, P8, and P15 showed that the expression of this protein is predominantly high and changes with age but not sex. Similarly, in the sexual dimorphic nucleus, the expression of HIGD1A varied according to age, but we were not able to detect significant differences in its expression according to sex. Altogether, these results suggest that HIGD1A protein is expressed in several areas of the central nervous system following a pattern that quantitatively changes with age but does not seem to change according to sex. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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