Cloning and distribution of galanin-like peptide mRNA in the hypothalamus and pituitary of the macaque
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Authors
Steiner, Robert A.
Cunningham, Matthew J.
Scarlett, Jarrad M.
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Endocrine Society
Abstract
Galanin-like peptide (GALP) is a newly discovered hypothalamic
neuropeptide, which is regulated by leptin and implicated in the
regulation of GnRH secretion in the rodent. We searched the human genome
database and determined that the human GALP gene comprises six exons, as
has been shown for human galanin. We used rapid amplification of cDNA ends
to clone a full-length cDNA (802 bp) of the macaque homologue of GALP and
found it to be highly conserved between human and macaque at both the
nucleotide (93%) and peptide (94%) levels. Mature GALP is predicted to be
60 amino acids in the macaque as in other species, and the region of GALP
(9-21) that shows homology to the N-terminal 13 amino acids of galanin is
perfectly conserved. We mapped the distribution of GALP mRNA in the
hypothalamus and pituitary of the macaque by in situ hybridization and
observed that, as in rodent species, the expression of GALP mRNA is
confined to the arcuate nucleus, median eminence, and neurohypophysis.
Using double-label in situ hybridization, we found that nearly all (98%)
GALP mRNA-expressing cells in the arcuate nucleus also express mRNA for
the long form of the leptin receptor. These findings suggest that a
leptin-GALP signaling pathway exists in a primate species.
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Citation
Endocrinology. 2002 Mar;143(3):755-63
