4.6 Article

PLP1-lacZ transgenic mice reveal that splice variants containing human-specific exons are relatively minor in comparison to the archetypal transcript and that an upstream regulatory element bolsters expression during early postnatal brain development

Journal

FRONTIERS IN CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2022.1087145

Keywords

myelin proteolipid protein gene (PLP1); splice variants; gene regulation; brain; RT-qPCR; transgenic mice; lacZ reporter gene

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By using transgenic animal models, researchers have gained insights into the mechanisms that control the developmental expression of the PLP1 gene. They analyzed the expression of transgenes containing PLP1 genomic DNA from humans or mice, and observed differences in their expression patterns. The findings suggest that the differences between human and mouse PLP1 sequences play a critical role in gene expression.
Much of what is known about the mechanisms that control the developmental expression of the myelin proteolipid protein gene (PLP1) has been attained through use of transgenic animal models. In this study, we analyzed expression of related transgenes which utilize PLP1 genomic DNA from either human or mouse to drive expression of a lacZ reporter. Human PLP1 (hPLP1) sequence span either the proximal 6.2 or 2.7 kb of 5 '-flanking DNA to an internal site in Exon 2, while those from mouse comprise the proximal 2.3 kb of 5 '-flanking DNA to an analogous site in Exon 2. Transgenes with hPLP1 sequence were named, in part, to the amount of upstream sequence they have [6.2hPLP(+)Z/FL and 2.7hPLP(+)Z]. The transgene containing mouse sequence is referred to here as mPLP(+)Z, to denote the species origin of PLP1 DNA. Mice which harbor the 6.2hPLP(+)Z/FL transgene were used as a model system to investigate the developmental expression of splice variants that incorporate supplementary exons from what is classically defined as PLP1 intron 1. While expression of the splice variants were detected in brain through RT-PCR analysis, they are present at much lower levels relative to the archetypal (classic) transcript. Additionally, we show that mice which harbor the 6.2hPLP(+)Z/FL transgene demonstrate wide-ranging expression throughout brain at P2, whereas expression of mPLP(+)Z is quite limited at this age. Therefore, we generated new transgenic mouse lines with the 2.7hPLP(+)Z transgene, which contains hPLP1 sequence orthologous to just that in mPLP(+)Z. Of the seven lines analyzed, six showed higher levels of 2.7hPLP(+)Z expression in brain at P21 compared to P2; the other line expressed the transgene, only weakly, at either age. This trend, coupled with the robust expression observed for 6.2hPLP(+)Z/FL at P2, suggests that the distal 3.5 kb of 5 '-flanking PLP1 DNA specific to 6.2hPLP(+)Z/FL contains regulatory element(s) important for promoting early postnatal expression in brain.

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