AI Article Synopsis

  • - The PLP1 gene is crucial for producing the main protein in the brain's myelin, and its expression is tightly controlled due to its link to neurological disorders when imbalanced.
  • - A recent study explored how certain regions in the PLP1 gene affect its expression in transgenic mice, specifically focusing on the wmN1 and ASE regions found in intron 1.
  • - Findings revealed that the wmN1 region is essential for gene expression in various cell types, while removing the ASE region did not impact expression, suggesting compensatory factors might be at play.

Article Abstract

The myelin proteolipid protein gene (PLP1) encodes the most abundant protein in CNS myelin. Expression of the gene must be strictly regulated, as evidenced by human X-linked leukodystrophies resulting from variations in PLP1 copy number, including elevated dosages as well as deletions. Recently, we showed that the wmN1 region in human PLP1 (hPLP1) intron 1 is required to promote high levels of an hPLP1-lacZ transgene in mice, using a Cre-lox approach. The current study tests whether loss of the wmN1 region from a related transgene containing mouse Plp1 (mPlp1) DNA produces similar results. In addition, we investigated the effects of loss of another region (ASE) in mPlp1 intron 1. Previous studies have shown that the ASE is required to promote high levels of mPlp1-lacZ expression by transfection analysis, but had no effect when removed from the native gene in mouse. Whether this is due to compensation by another regulatory element in mPlp1 that was not included in the mPlp1-lacZ constructs, or to differences in methodology, is unclear. Two transgenic mouse lines were generated that harbor mPLP(+)Z/FL. The parental transgene utilizes mPlp1 sequences (proximal 2.3 kb of 5'-flanking DNA to the first 37 bp of exon 2) to drive expression of a lacZ reporter cassette. Here we demonstrate that mPLP(+)Z/FL is expressed in oligodendrocytes, oligodendrocyte precursor cells, olfactory ensheathing cells and neurons in brain, and Schwann cells in sciatic nerve. Loss of the wmN1 region from the parental transgene abolished expression, whereas removal of the ASE had no effect.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7060809PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11064-019-02919-wDOI Listing

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