| Literature DB >> 28122917 |
Olga Kononenko1,2, Vladimir Galatenko3, Malin Andersson1, Igor Bazov4, Hiroyuki Watanabe1, Xing Wu Zhou1, Anna Iatsyshyna1,5, Irina Mityakina3, Tatiana Yakovleva1, Daniil Sarkisyan1, Igor Ponomarev6, Oleg Krishtal2, Niklas Marklund7, Alex Tonevitsky3, DeAnna L Adkins8,9, Georgy Bakalkin1.
Abstract
Regulation of the formation and rewiring of neural circuits by neuropeptides may require coordinated production of these signaling molecules and their receptors that may be established at the transcriptional level. Here, we address this hypothesis by comparing absolute expression levels of opioid peptides with their receptors, the largest neuropeptide family, and by characterizing coexpression (transcriptionally coordinated) patterns of these genes. We demonstrated that expression patterns of opioid genes highly correlate within and across functionally and anatomically different areas. Opioid peptide genes, compared with their receptor genes, are transcribed at much greater absolute levels, which suggests formation of a neuropeptide cloud that covers the receptor-expressed circuits. Surprisingly, we found that both expression levels and the proportion of opioid receptors are strongly lateralized in the spinal cord, interregional coexpression patterns are side specific, and intraregional coexpression profiles are affected differently by left- and right-side unilateral body injury. We propose that opioid genes are regulated as interconnected components of the same molecular system distributed between distinct anatomic regions. The striking feature of this system is its asymmetric coexpression patterns, which suggest side-specific regulation of selective neural circuits by opioid neurohormones.-Kononenko, O., Galatenko, V., Andersson, M., Bazov, I., Watanabe, H., Zhou, X. W., Iatsyshyna, A., Mityakina, I., Yakovleva, T., Sarkisyan, D., Ponomarev, I., Krishtal, O., Marklund, N., Tonevitsky, A., Adkins, D. L., Bakalkin, G. Intra- and interregional coregulation of opioid genes: broken symmetry in spinal circuits. © FASEB.Entities:
Keywords: lateralization; neuropeptides; spinal cord
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28122917 PMCID: PMC5388547 DOI: 10.1096/fj.201601039R
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191