1. Detection of msj-1 gene expression in the frog, Rana esculenta testis, brain, and spinal cord.
- Author
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Meccariello R, Cobellis G, Scarpa D, Fienga G, Pierantoni R, and Fasano S
- Subjects
- Animals, Gene Expression physiology, HSP40 Heat-Shock Proteins, Heat-Shock Proteins, Male, Rana esculenta, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Spermatozoa metabolism, Brain metabolism, Spinal Cord metabolism, Testis metabolism
- Abstract
MSJ-1 is member of the DnaJ/heat shock protein (Hsp) 40 chaperone protein family. It is present in mouse testis and spinal cord. In particular, MSJ-1 is localized in post-meiotic cells and in motoneurones of the ventral horns. To assess whether the role of this protein is evolutionarily conserved, we have investigated if msj-1 gene is expressed in the frog, Rana esculenta. Using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), a msj-1-like transcript was detected in testis, brain, and spinal cord. Homology ranging from 42.3 to 46.0% was found as compared with the mammalian counterparts. Muscle did not show any signal. By Western blot analysis, a signal of the predicted size of 30 kDa was evidenced in testis, brain, and spinal cord but not in ovary, heart, liver, kidney, and muscle. MSJ-1 fluctuations in the testis reveal that it appeared in concomitance with post-meiotic events during the annual sexual cycle, as shown in a previous study. The protein is localized in spermatids and is still retained in mature spermatozoa, where it has perinuclear and centriolar localization. MSJ-1 levels did not change in brain and spinal cord. Furthermore, in the brain MSJ-1 was mainly present in diencephalon and mesencephalon, while in spinal cord MSJ-1 was localized into several motoneurones of the cervical and thoracic tract. A putative role in vesicle trafficking is briefly discussed., (Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2004
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