Title
Pregnancy-associated glycoprotein (pag) family: Transcripts and gene amplicons in camelids
Date Issued
01 January 2009
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Majewska M.
Panasiewicz G.
Klisch K.
Mamani J.M.
Abd-Elnaeim M.M.
Szafranska B.
Publisher(s)
Elsevier B.V.
Abstract
In this study, the placental localization of PAG-like transcripts and genomic existence of PAG-like amplicons in new-world (Lp, Lama pacos, alpaca) and old-world camelids (Cb, Camelus bactrianus, bactrian; Cd, Camelus dromedarius; dromedary) are reported for the first time. Sections of Lp (150-347 days post coitum), Cd (43-90 cm crown-rump length) and Cb (term) placentas were used for heterologous (ht; cross-species) autoradiographic in situ hybridization (aISH) with single-stranded diagnostic (antisense) or control (sense) [α-35S]dATP-labeled 323 nt porcine PAG8 (pPAG8) cDNA probes produced by asymmetric PCRs. The aISH with antisense 35S-pPAG8 probe identified camelid PAG-like (LpPAG, CbPAG and CdPAG) mRNA expression restricted to chorionic epithelium cells within placentas of camelids. In addition, genomic DNA (gDNA), isolated from placental sections were used as templates for camelid PAG-like gene amplicon production by PCR. Specificity of the obtained multiple camelid gDNA PAG-like amplicons was confirmed by double ht-Southern hybridizations with [a-32P]dATP-labeled 611 bp pPAG5 and pPAG10 double-stranded cDNA probes. The double ht-Southern hybridizations of camelid gDNA amplicons (with pPAG5 and -10 probes) allowed the identification of length-polymorphism of LpPAG, CbPAG and CdPAG genes, coding catalytically active and potentially inactive forms. Such an application of porcine PAG probes may be advantageous for future identification of still undiscovered PAG-like families in other eutherian species. Copyright © 2009 by the Society for Biology of Reproduction.
Start page
127
End page
150
Volume
9
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología reproductiva
Ciencia veterinaria
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-70349776721
PubMed ID
Source
Reproductive Biology
ISSN of the container
1642431X
Sponsor(s)
This study as a part of the Ph.D. thesis of M. Majewska's dissertation was supported by the State Committee for Scientific Research (UWM522-0206.0206 and UWM528-0206.0805 projects) granted to BS and EFS granted to MM.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus