Characterization of three corticotropin-releasing factor receptors in catfish: a novel third receptor is predominantly expressed in pituitary and urophysis

M Arai, IQ Assil, AB Abou-Samra - Endocrinology, 2001 - academic.oup.com
M Arai, IQ Assil, AB Abou-Samra
Endocrinology, 2001academic.oup.com
The present study reports the isolation of three complementary DNA (cDNA) clones
encoding distinct subtypes of CRF receptors from the diploid catfish (cf) species, Ameiurus
nebulosus. The first clone encodes a 446-amino acid protein (cfCRF-R1) that is highly
homologous to mouse (m) CRF-R1 (93% identical). The cfCRF-R1 messenger RNA is highly
expressed in the brain, and its distribution pattern correlates well with that of mammalian
CRF-R1, except for weak expression in the pituitary. When transiently expressed in COS-7 …
Abstract
The present study reports the isolation of three complementary DNA (cDNA) clones encoding distinct subtypes of CRF receptors from the diploid catfish (cf) species, Ameiurus nebulosus. The first clone encodes a 446-amino acid protein (cfCRF-R1) that is highly homologous to mouse (m) CRF-R1 (93% identical). The cfCRF-R1 messenger RNA is highly expressed in the brain, and its distribution pattern correlates well with that of mammalian CRF-R1, except for weak expression in the pituitary. When transiently expressed in COS-7 cells, cfCRF-R1 bound CRF, urotensin I, and sauvagine with similar affinities. The second full-length cDNA, which was cloned from catfish heart, encodes a 406-amino acid protein that showed homology to murine CRF-R2 (88%) and when expressed in COS-7 cells preferentially bound sauvagine. The highest level of cfCRF-R2 expression was observed in the heart. The third full-length cDNA clone, which encodes a 428-amino acid protein, is structurally closer to cfCRF-R1 (85%) than to cfCRF-R2 (80%). This novel CRF receptor (cfCRF-R3) bound CRF with a 5-fold higher affinity than urotensin I and sauvagine and was expressed in the pituitary gland, urophysis, and brain. The presence of three different CRF receptors, each with distinct tissue distribution and ligand binding properties, suggests a complex CRF/urotensin I system.
Oxford University Press