The ovalbumin gene family: hormonal control of X and Y gene transcription and mRNA accumulation
- PMID: 7471213
- DOI: 10.1016/0092-8674(81)90152-5
The ovalbumin gene family: hormonal control of X and Y gene transcription and mRNA accumulation
Abstract
The ovalbumin gene family is composed of three genes, X, Y and ovalbumin, which are expressed in laying hen oviduct. We have analyzed the in vivo transcription products of X and Y genes and the effect of steroid hormones on their synthesis and accumulation. As in the case of ovalbumin, the complete gene transcripts and processing intermediates are present in the poly(A)+ RNA fraction. The mature RNAs are found in polysomes and are translated into proteins. The expression of X and Y genes is controlled by steroid hormones: X and Y RNAs are not detectable in oviducts from chicks withdrawn from estrogen stimulation, whereas in chicks stimulated with estrogen for 7 days, X RNA represents 0.3% and Y RNA 0.8% of ovalbumin mRNA. In laying hen, however, the levels of X and Y RNAs are about 2% of ovalbumin mRNA. After stimulation with other steroid hormones, alone or in combination, the level of X and Y RNA does not achieve that detected in laying hen. Progesterone has a much weaker effect on X RNA accumulation than on that of Y and ovalbumin mRNAs. Studies with isolated nuclei show that X and Y gene expression is regulated by hormones at the level of transcription. However, the differences observed between the transcription rates and the accumulation of X and Y mRNAs suggest that the expression of X and Y genes could also be controlled at the levels of RNA processing and/or mRNA stability.
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