4.2 Article

Androgen regulation of SMR2 gene expression in rat submandibular gland:: Evidence for a graded but not a binary response

Journal

JOURNAL OF HISTOCHEMISTRY & CYTOCHEMISTRY
Volume 51, Issue 10, Pages 1317-1329

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/002215540305101009

Keywords

androgens; beta-adrenergic; salivary glands; glutamic acid/glutamine-rich proteins; transcription regulation; in situ hybridization

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Expression of SMR2, a member of the gene family encoding salivary glutamine/glutamic acid-rich proteins, is regulated by androgens in rat submandibular gland acinar cells. To further characterize SMR2 regulation, we analyzed SMR2 expression during submandibular gland postnatal development and rat puberty at both a global and a single-cell level. Using in situ detection of mature and primary SMR2 transcripts, we show that SMR2 expression is heterogeneous among acinar cells. However, only one cell population with various amounts of mRNAs can be defined. The number of high-expressing cells increases in males during puberty and in females up to 6 weeks of age, suggesting that some factor in addition to acinar differentiation might be important for SMR2 expression in female rats. Involvement of the beta-adrenergic system in regulating SMR2 expression was tested in rats exposed daily to isoproterenol for 4 days. Under these conditions we found an increase in SMR2 expression in female rats, associated with an increase in SMR2 mRNA levels in most acinar cells. This suggests that a signaling cascade, elicited by beta-adrenergic stimuli, might act in concert with androgens to regulate SMR2 expression.

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