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Multi-species sequence comparison reveals conservation of ghrelin gene-derived splice variants encoding a truncated ghrelin peptide

Authors :
Seim, Inge
Jeffery, Penny
Thomas, Patrick
Walpole, Carina
Maugham, Michelle
Fung, Jenny
Yap, Pei-Yi
O'Keeffe, Angela
Lai, John
Whiteside, Eliza
Herington, Adrian
Chopin, Lisa
Seim, Inge
Jeffery, Penny
Thomas, Patrick
Walpole, Carina
Maugham, Michelle
Fung, Jenny
Yap, Pei-Yi
O'Keeffe, Angela
Lai, John
Whiteside, Eliza
Herington, Adrian
Chopin, Lisa
Source :
Endocrine
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The peptide hormone ghrelin is a potent orexigen produced predominantly in the stomach. It has a number of other biological actions, including roles in appetite stimulation, energy balance, the stimulation of growth hormone release and the regulation of cell proliferation. Recently, several ghrelin gene splice variants have been described. Here, we attempted to identify conserved alternative splicing of the ghrelin gene by cross-species sequence comparisons. We identified a novel human exon 2-deleted variant and provide preliminary evidence that this splice variant and in1-ghrelin encode a C-terminally truncated form of the ghrelin peptide, termed minighrelin. These variants are expressed in humans and mice, demonstrating conservation of alternative splicing spanning 90 million years. Minighrelin appears to have similar actions to full-length ghrelin, as treatment with exogenous minighrelin peptide stimulates appetite and feeding in mice. Forced expression of the exon 2-deleted preproghrelin variant mirrors the effect of the canonical preproghrelin, stimulating cell proliferation and migration in the PC3 prostate cancer cell line. This is the first study to characterise an exon 2-deleted preproghrelin variant and to demonstrate sequence conservation of ghrelin gene-derived splice variants that encode a truncated ghrelin peptide. This adds further impetus for studies into the alternative splicing of the ghrelin gene and the function of novel ghrelin peptides in vertebrates.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Endocrine
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn944155742
Document Type :
Electronic Resource