Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Neuropeptides. 2010 Feb;44(1):31-44. doi: 10.1016/j.npep.2009.11.002. Epub 2009 Dec 14.
Neuropeptides regulate cell-cell signaling and influence many biological processes in vertebrates, including development, growth, and reproduction. The complex processing of neuropeptides from prohormone proteins by prohormone convertases, combined with the evolutionary distance between the chicken and mammalian species that have experienced extensive neuropeptide research, has led to the empirical confirmation of only 18 chicken prohormone proteins. To expand our knowledge of the neuropeptide and prohormone convertase gene complement, we performed an exhaustive survey of the chicken genomic, EST, and proteomic databases using a list of 95 neuropeptide and 7 prohormone convertase genes known in other species. Analysis of the EST resources and 22 microarray studies offered a comprehensive portrait of gene expression across multiple conditions. Five neuropeptide genes (apelin, cocaine-and amphetamine-regulated transcript protein, insulin-like 5, neuropeptide S, and neuropeptide B) previously unknown in chicken were identified and 62 genes were confirmed. Although most neuropeptide gene families known in human are present in chicken, there are several gene not present in the chicken. Conversely, several chicken neuropeptide genes are absent from mammalian species, including C-RF amide, c-type natriuretic peptide 1 precursor, and renal natriuretic peptide. The prohormone convertases, with one exception, were found in the chicken genome. Bioinformatic models used to predict prohormone cleavages confirm that the processing of prohormone proteins into neuropeptides is similar between species. Neuropeptide genes are most frequently expressed in the brain and head, followed by the ovary and small intestine. Microarray analyses revealed that the expression of adrenomedullin, chromogranin-A, augurin, neuromedin-U, platelet-derived growth factor A and D, proenkephalin, relaxin-3, prepronociceptin, and insulin-like growth factor I was most susceptible (P-value<0.005) to changes in developmental stage, gender, and genetic line among other conditions studied. Our complete survey and characterization facilitates understanding of neuropeptides genes in the chicken, an animal of importance to biomedical and agricultural research.
神经肽调节细胞间信号传递,并影响脊椎动物的许多生物学过程,包括发育、生长和繁殖。神经肽原蛋白经激素原转化酶的复杂加工,再加上在经历了广泛神经肽研究的鸡和哺乳动物物种之间存在进化距离,这导致仅经验证了 18 种鸡的激素原蛋白。为了扩展我们对神经肽和激素原转化酶基因组成的了解,我们使用其他物种中已知的 95 种神经肽和 7 种激素原转化酶基因列表,对鸡的基因组、EST 和蛋白质组数据库进行了详尽的调查。对 EST 资源和 22 个微阵列研究的分析提供了多种条件下基因表达的全面情况。先前在鸡中未知的 5 种神经肽基因(apelin、可卡因和安非他命调节转录蛋白、胰岛素样 5、神经肽 S 和神经肽 B)被鉴定出来,并确认了 62 个基因。尽管人类中已知的大多数神经肽基因家族都存在于鸡中,但也有一些基因不存在于鸡中。相反,几种鸡的神经肽基因在哺乳动物物种中不存在,包括 C-RF 酰胺、C 型利钠肽 1 前体和肾利钠肽。除了一个例外,激素原转化酶都存在于鸡的基因组中。用于预测激素原切割的生物信息学模型证实,物种间激素原蛋白向神经肽的加工过程相似。神经肽基因在大脑和头部表达最频繁,其次是卵巢和小肠。微阵列分析显示,在其他研究条件下,肾上腺髓质素、嗜铬粒蛋白 A、奥古林、神经肽 U、血小板衍生生长因子 A 和 D、前强啡肽、松弛素-3、前原降钙素、胰岛素样生长因子 I 的表达最容易受到发育阶段、性别和遗传系等变化的影响(P 值<0.005)。我们的全面调查和特征描述有助于理解鸡中的神经肽基因,鸡是对生物医学和农业研究很重要的动物。