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. 1990 Jan 15;265(2):1077-81.

Tissue-specific developmental expression of the kallikrein gene family in the rat

Affiliations
  • PMID: 2295600
Free article

Tissue-specific developmental expression of the kallikrein gene family in the rat

J A Clements et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Using a series of gene-specific oligonucleotide probes, we have explored the developmental pattern of expression of six members of the rat kallikrein gene family (PS, S1, S2, S3, K1, and P1) in the submandibular gland (SMG) and kidney of both sexes, the prostate and testis of the male, and the anterior pituitary gland (AP) of the female rat. PS (true kallikrein) mRNA was detected in early neonatal life in the SMG and kidney of both sexes. K1, a second kallikrein gene family member expressed in the adult kidney, had a developmental pattern similar to PS in the kidney. In contrast, tonin (S2), S3, K1, and P1, all of which are expressed in the adult SMG, did not reach detectable SMG mRNA levels until puberty in either the male or female rat. Both S3 and P1, which are expressed in the adult prostate, and the novel P1-like mRNA previously detected in the adult rat testis, first appeared in early puberty. In the female AP, PS mRNA levels were not detected until early puberty and thus exhibited a developmental profile different from that of prolactin. The demonstration that S1, S2, S3, P1, and K1 are not expressed in the SMG or prostate until puberty is consistent with the expression of these genes in these tissues being androgen-regulated; the first appearance of PS mRNA in the female AP in early puberty similarly reflects the estrogen dependence of PS gene expression in this tissue. The presence of PS mRNA levels in the SMG and kidney prior to sexual maturation reflects the androgen independence of PS gene expression and suggests that PS (true kallikrein) may play a constitutive and/or developmental role in SMG or renal physiology.

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