A cDNA for chicken avidin was identified in a chicken oviduct cDNA library by screening with antibodies and synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotides. Four recombinant clones were characterized and each contained the sequence of the oligonucleotide probes used in screening. They were capable also of expressing an antigen recognizable by a polyclonal or a mixture of monoclonal antibodies raised against avidin. The longest clone, lambda cAV4, contained the entire coding sequence of avidin along with a signal peptide of 24 amino acids. An avidin mRNA, approximately 700 nucleotides in length, was induced by a single injection of progesterone over a period of twenty four hours. The avidin mRNA was distributed in a tissue-specific manner, since detectable concentration of the mRNA appeared only in the oviduct after stimulation with progesterone alone or with a combination of progesterone and estrogen. No avidin mRNA was detected in the liver or kidney under these conditions. Preliminary results on the genomic complexity of avidin suggest a single copy gene. Isolation of the natural gene for avidin and studies on its regulation now can be initiated using the cDNA probe.
Immunohistochemical analysis of avidin and ovalbumin expression in the normally developing chick oviduct was compared to those changes induced by exogenous estrogen. Oviduct maturation was found to occur in two consecutive phases: slow proliferation and rapid differentiation. Mitosis was induced in the epithelium by estrogen, whereas it was inhibited by progesterone. Endogenous progesterone may retard the proliferation and prevent the differentiation, an effect that is overridden by increased estrogen concentration at the beginning of differentiation. Short secondary stimulation was shown to closely mimic normal maturation. When chicks treated with diethylstilbestrol (DES) for 1 month were allowed to mature, there were marked alterations in oviduct histology and laying behavior. The tubular glands were found to form from the surface epithelium as budlike invaginations, and these cells also contained avidin and ovalbumin. Ovalbumin production was stable in tubular glands. In contrast, the intensity of avidin staining was variable between gland cells even in the same sections. It was conspicuous that the number of avidin-expressing gland cells diminished markedly when estrogen treatment was prolonged over 1 week. After 2-week stimulation with DES, avidin was expressed predominantly by cells of the basal layer of pseudostratified surface epithelium, and ovalbumin mainly by tubular glands and cells of the luminal layer of surface epithelium. Neither of these proteins was expressed by goblet cells. Expression of progesterone receptor, characterized by two antibodies (polyclonal IgG-RB and monoclonal PR6), did not explain the heterogeneity of expression of avidin and ovalbumin, but probably reflects various differentiation stages of epithelial cells.
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