Nuñez L, Faught W J, Frawley L S
Laboratory of Molecular Dynamics, Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998 Aug 4;95(16):9648-53. doi: 10.1073/pnas.95.16.9648.
The existence of an intrinsic oscillator for pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion in normal and transformed GnRH neurons raises the question of whether the corresponding gene also is expressed in an episodic manner. To resolve this question, we used a modification of conventional luciferase technology, which enabled continuous monitoring of GnRH gene activity in single, living neurons. With this method, the relative rate of endogenous gene expression is estimated by quantification of photons emitted by individual neurons microinjected with a GnRH promoter-driven luciferase reporter construct. Immortalized GT1-1 neurons, which secrete the decapeptide GnRH in a pulsatile manner conceptually identical to that of their nontransformed counterparts in vivo, were chosen as the model for these studies. First, we injected individual cells with purified luciferase protein and established that the reporter half-life was sufficiently short (50 min) to enable detection of transient changes in gene expression. Next, we subjected transfected GT1-1 cells to continuous monitoring of reporter activity for 16 h and found that the majority of them exhibited spontaneous fluctuations of photonic activity over time. Finally, we established that photonic activity accurately reflected endogenous GnRH gene expression by treating transfected GT1-1 cells with phorbol 12-myristate 13 acetate (a consensus inhibitor of GnRH gene expression) and observing a dramatic suppression of photonic emissions from continuously monitored cells. Taken together, these results demonstrate the validity of our "real-time" strategy for dynamically monitoring GnRH gene activity in living neurons. Moreover, our findings indicate that GnRH gene expression as well as neuropeptide release can occur in an intermittent manner.
正常和转化的促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)神经元中存在用于脉冲式GnRH分泌的内在振荡器,这就提出了一个问题,即相应的基因是否也以间歇性方式表达。为了解决这个问题,我们对传统的荧光素酶技术进行了改进,从而能够连续监测单个活神经元中的GnRH基因活性。通过这种方法,通过对注射了GnRH启动子驱动的荧光素酶报告构建体的单个神经元发射的光子进行定量,来估计内源性基因表达的相对速率。永生化的GT1-1神经元以与体内未转化的对应神经元在概念上相同的脉冲方式分泌十肽GnRH,被选作这些研究的模型。首先,我们向单个细胞注射纯化的荧光素酶蛋白,并确定报告基因的半衰期足够短(50分钟),以便能够检测基因表达的瞬时变化。接下来,我们对转染的GT1-1细胞进行了16小时的报告基因活性连续监测,发现它们中的大多数随着时间的推移表现出光子活性的自发波动。最后,我们通过用佛波醇12-肉豆蔻酸酯13-乙酸酯(一种GnRH基因表达的公认抑制剂)处理转染的GT1-1细胞,并观察连续监测的细胞中光子发射的显著抑制,确定光子活性准确反映了内源性GnRH基因表达。综上所述,这些结果证明了我们在活神经元中动态监测GnRH基因活性的“实时”策略的有效性。此外,我们的研究结果表明,GnRH基因表达以及神经肽释放可以以间歇性方式发生。