Glucocorticoids, in conjunction with their cognate receptors, exert negative-feedback effects on the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis, suppressing adrenal steroid secretions. Two types of corticosteroid receptor, distinguishable by their ability to bind corticosterone, have been identified as classical mineralocorticoid (type I) and glucocorticoid (type II) receptors by cloning their complementary DNAs. The type I receptor controls the basal circadian rhythm of corticosteroid secretion. Both receptor types are involved in negative feedback, but the type II receptor may be more important for terminating the stress response as it is the only one to be increased in animals rendered more sensitive to corticosteroid negative-feedback effects. Here we create a transgenic mouse with impaired corticosteroid-receptor function by partially knocking out gene expression with type II glucocorticoid receptor antisense RNA. We use this animal to study the glucocorticoid feedback effect on the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis.
We have developed an improved method for determining CAT activity directed by stably (transgenic mice) or transiently (tissue culture cell lines) introduced CAT reporter gene constructs. The procedure is based on the use of a new buffer system which considerably increases the stability of the CAT enzyme during the preparation of the crude cell extracts. When compared to other procedures, our method enables an increase of up to 100-fold in the sensitivity of the assay, depending on the transgenic tissue tested. Furthermore, a strong increase (up to 23-fold) was also observed with various promoter/CAT constructs transiently transfected in established tissue culture cell lines. This increase in sensitivity provides a significant reduction in the time required to perform the CAT assay when strong promoters are studied (from 18 to 1 hr) and is also very useful for the analysis of CAT gene expression driven by weak promoters.
In the present study, electroporation was used to test the ability of spermatozoa to carry foreign DNA into the bovine oocytes. Frozen-thawed bovine spermatozoa (10(7)/ml) were electroporated using six different combinations of voltage (500, 1,000, or 1,500 V) and capacitance (1 or 25 microFarads) in the presence of 1 mg/ml of plasmid pRGH527. The portions of plasmids retained by sperm cells after three washings (stable for ten washings) were 4.3, 5.5, 5.1, 6.0, 6.8, and 5.8% for 1 microFarad, 500, 1,000, and 1,500 V and 25 microFarads, 500, 1,000, and 1,500 V, respectively. Nonelectroporated cells have retained only 1% of plasmids. In the same experiment, electroporated spermatozoa were acrosome reacted by treatment with ionophore A23187 to evaluate the fraction of marked plasmids joined at the acrosomal membrane. The results show that 3.5, 5.0, 4.4, 5.0, 6.3, and 4.4% remain tied to the ionophore-treated sperm. Only 0.7% of plasmid was retained after removal of the acrosome of nonelectroporated cells. Acrosome reaction was not significantly induced by the electrical field (EF) (P less than 0.005). EF decrease motility significantly for greater than 100 V in 0.3 M mannitol (M) and mannitol-TALP (MT) (1/1) media and greater than or equal to 500 V (P less than 0.05) in TALP medium. The retained plasmid rate was compared between TALP medium M and MT media and resulted in a percentage of 1.0, 2.5, 6.5 at 1 microFarads, 100 V, and 0.9, 3.8, and 3.8 at 25 microFarads, 100 V in TALP, MT, and M medium, respectively. Sperm cells electroporated at 1 microFarad, 500 or 1,000 V, 25 microFarad, 500 V or 1,000 in TALP medium hold plasmids in proportion of 5.2, 5.4, 7.4, and 6.0%. Electroporation above 100 V in M and MT killed the cells. In a part of this experiment, spermatozoa electroporated in the presence of radiolabeled plasmids have been treated with DNase I and results revealed that 35, 28, 54, 58, and 3% of marked DNA remains in sperm cells following digestion after electroporation in TALP (1,000 V, 1 and 25 microFarads), M medium (100 V, 1 and 25 microFarads), and control, respectively. Using in vitro matured bovine oocytes, the electroporation conditions were correlated with the fertilization rate (85% for control and 55% for electroporated spermatozoa). Autoradiography of embryos following fertilization indicated the presence of plasmids in the cytoplasm and in the zona pellucida.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Four polymorphisms in the swine leptin (LEP) gene were characterized and evaluated for association with economically important production traits in Yorkshire, Landrace and Duroc pigs. Our results show that these polymorphisms are generally of low frequency or are absent in pig populations. Two polymorphisms (A2845T and T3469C) may be associated (P < 0.0078) with feed intake and growth rate traits in Landrace pigs.
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