Literature DB >> 9469615

A minimal human MBP promoter-lacZ transgene is appropriately regulated in developing brain and after optic enucleation, but not in shiverer mutant mice.

L Wrabetz1, C Taveggia, M L Feltri, A Quattrini, R Awatramani, S S Scherer, A Messing, J Kamholz.   

Abstract

Previous studies, both in vitro and in vivo, suggest that small portions of the mouse myelin basic protein (MBP) promoter are sufficient to activate regulated expression of MBP. To confirm our previous in vitro studies, we prepared transgenic mice with short regions of the human MBP promoter fused to the lacZ reporter gene. We found that 750 nucleotides of the proximal human MBP promoter is sufficient to activate oligodendrocyte-specific, developmentally regulated expression of lacZ in three independent lines. This promoter, however, does not activate expression of lacZ in Schwann cells in peripheral nerve or in adult mouse brain. The relative levels of beta-galactosidase specific activity, mRNA, and transcription parallel those of MBP mRNA during myelinogenesis. Thus, we exploited this transgene as a quantitative tool to evaluate the response to stimuli known to affect myelination. Transgene expression is reduced 75 % after optic enucleation, as previously reported for levels of MBP mRNA, indicating that axons signal to this portion of the proximal MBP promoter to fully activate MBP expression during myelinogenesis. Instead, in adult shiverer mice, another setting in which MBP transcription is modulated, transgene expression is not increased, in contrast to the increased transcriptional activation of MBP previously reported in these mice. These data suggest that the regulatory region that mediates transcriptional activation of the MBP gene is modular, since discrete subregions are required for activation in Schwann cells, during myelinogenesis in oligodendrocytes, during maintenance myelination in adult brain, and in the dysmyelinating mutant shiverer mouse.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9469615     DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-4695(199801)34:1<10::aid-neu2>3.0.co;2-f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurobiol        ISSN: 0022-3034


  8 in total

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Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2014-11-02       Impact factor: 24.884

Review 2.  Axonal signals and oligodendrocyte differentiation.

Authors:  Maura Bozzali; Lawrence Wrabetz
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2004-05       Impact factor: 3.996

3.  Efficient and graded gene expression in glia and neurons of primary cerebellar cultures transduced by lentiviral vectors.

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4.  TACE (ADAM17) inhibits Schwann cell myelination.

Authors:  Rosa La Marca; Federica Cerri; Keisuke Horiuchi; Angela Bachi; M Laura Feltri; Lawrence Wrabetz; Carl P Blobel; Angelo Quattrini; James L Salzer; Carla Taveggia
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2011-06-12       Impact factor: 24.884

5.  On the occurrence of hypomyelination in a transgenic mouse model: a consequence of the myelin basic protein promoter?

Authors:  Stefanie Gaupp; Joseph Arezzo; Dipankar J Dutta; Gareth R John; Cedric S Raine
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6.  Targeted ablation of oligodendrocytes induces axonal pathology independent of overt demyelination.

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7.  Generation of a LacZ reporter transgenic mouse line for the stereological analysis of oligodendrocyte loss in galactosylceramidase deficiency.

Authors:  Hongling Zhu; Francesca Ornaghi; Sophie Belin; Maria I Givogri; Lawrence Wrabetz; Ernesto R Bongarzone
Journal:  J Neurosci Res       Date:  2016-07-18       Impact factor: 4.164

8.  P(0) glycoprotein overexpression causes congenital hypomyelination of peripheral nerves.

Authors:  L Wrabetz; M L Feltri; A Quattrini; D Imperiale; S Previtali; M D'Antonio; R Martini; X Yin; B D Trapp; L Zhou; S Y Chiu; A Messing
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  8 in total

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