| Literature DB >> 24769445 |
Eduardo N Fuentes1, Rodrigo Zuloaga2, Gino Nardocci3, Catalina Fernandez de la Reguera3, Nicolas Simonet3, Robinson Fumeron3, Juan Antonio Valdes4, Alfredo Molina4, Marco Alvarez5.
Abstract
Ribosomal biogenesis controls cellular growth in living organisms, with the rate-limiting step of this process being the transcription of ribosomal DNA (rDNA). Considering that epigenetic mechanisms allow an organism to respond to environmental changes, the expression in muscle of several molecules that regulate epigenetic rRNA synthesis, as well as rDNA transcription, were evaluated during the seasonal acclimatization of the carp. First, the nucleotide sequences encoding the components forming the NoRC (ttf-I, tip5) and eNoSC (sirt1, nml, suv39h1), two chromatin remodeling complexes that silence rRNA synthesis, as well as the sequence of ubf1, a key regulator of rDNA transcription, were obtained. Subsequently the transcriptional regulation of the aforementioned molecules, and other key molecules involved in rRNA synthesis (mh2a1, mh2a2, h2a.z, h2a.z.7, nuc, p80), was assessed. The carp sequences for TTF-I, TIP5, SIRT1, NML, SUV39H1, and UBF1 showed a high conservation of domains and key amino acids in comparison with other fish and higher vertebrates. The mRNA contents in muscle for ttf-I, tip5, sirt1, nml, suv39h1, mh2a1, mh2a.z, and nuc were up-regulated during winter in comparison with summer, whereas the mRNA levels of mh2a2, ubf1, and p80 were down-regulated. Also, the contents of molecules involved in processing the rRNA (snoRNAs) and pRNA, a stabilizer of NoRC complex, were analyzed, finding that these non-coding RNAs were not affected by seasonal acclimatization. These results suggest that variations in the expression of rRNA and the molecules that epigenetically regulate its synthesis are contributing to the muscle plasticity induced by seasonal acclimatization in carp.Entities:
Keywords: Epigenetics; Fish; Muscle; Seasonal acclimatization; rDNA transcription
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24769445 DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpb.2014.04.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol ISSN: 1096-4959 Impact factor: 2.231