| Literature DB >> 29069262 |
Viviani De-Marco1,2, Luciani R Carvalho1, Mariana F Guzzo1, Paulo S L Oliveira3, Larissa G Gomes1, Berenice B Mendonca1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism is the most common cause of naturally occurring hypercortisolism in dogs. CRHR1 expression in human and dog corticotrophinomas suggested that this gene affects pituitary tumorigenesis. The present study aimed to investigate mutations in the CRHR1 coding region in poodles with pituitary-dependent hyperadrenocorticism.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29069262 PMCID: PMC5629736 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2017(09)09
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Forward (F) and reverse (R) primers for canine CRHR1 amplification, with product sizes (bp) and annealing temperatures (Ta).
| Primer | Sequence | Product size (bp) | Ta (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1F | 5′ CTGAGTCAGGAGACGGCGCA 3′ | 422 | 50 |
| 1R | 5′ TCATTGTGGCGAAGCTGCTG 3′ | ||
| 2F | 5′ TTGGGATCCTAGGCTTGATG 3′ | 413 | 58 |
| 2R | 5′ GCAAGATTCCAGGTCTCCAG 3′ | ||
| 3F | 5′ GAACGAATGCTGGATCCCTA 3′ | 456 | 50 |
| 3R | 5′ TCTCGTGGATACAACCAC 3′ | ||
| 4F | 5′ AGATGGACGAACCAATGGAC 3′ | 581 | 58 |
| 4R | 5′ AGTCTCCTTCCCACCCTGTC 3′ | ||
| 5F | 5′ GGGAAGGGGAATAACTACCG 3′ | 401 | 50 |
| 5R | 5′ GTCTCTTGGAACCTCTGGCA 3′ | ||
| 6-8F | 5′ TCCTCAGTTTCCCCATCCATA 3′ | 993 | 50 |
| 6-8R | 5′ TGAGGTACAGGCTCTCAGCC 3′ | ||
| 9-12F | 5′ GAGGCATTGTGTTGGGATCT 3′ | 1,235 | 55 |
| 9-12R | 5′ CAGGTCCCTAATGAGGATGC 3′ | ||
| 13F | 5′ ACGTGTACTGCTGCTTGTGG 3′ | 419 | 58 |
| 13R | 5′ GAGAGCAGCCATAGTCTGGG 3′ |
Figure 1The wild-type sequence of exon 4 of the CRHR1 gene from a control dog (upper panel) and the heterozygous G-to-A substitution causing the amino acid change (p.V97M) in a poodle with ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism (lower panel).
Figure 2The dog with ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism and carrying the allelic variant p.V97M, showing marked abdominal distension, alopecia, skin atrophy and telangiectasia.
Figure 3The structural rearrangement in the mutant protein (red) and the resulting changes in the contact surface between the ligand and the mutant receptor (containing methionine). The wild-type receptor is shown for comparison.
Figure 4The observed fold changes in ACTH relative to the basal ACTH level in cells transfected with empty vector were 5.01±0.65 (empty vector, EV), 5.41±0.57 (wild-type, WT) and 11.57±1.45 (mutant, MUT) at 12h and 14.0±1.72 (EV), 21±3.6 (WT) and 38.9±0.45 (MUT) at 24h. There were significant differences in the ACTH levels of cells transfected with the mutant plasmid compared with cells transfected with the wild-type plasmid or with empty vector at 24h (**p<0.01, *p<0.05).