Abstract

A striking biochemical alteration to the epithelium of the small intestine upon weaning is the loss of microvillar sialic acids. Antibody and cDNA probes to the β-galactoside α2,6-sialyltransferase (SiaT-1, EC 2.4.99.1) were used to characterize the expression of this sialyltransferase in the small intestine of suckling rats. SiaT-1 mRNA and protein in the intestinal epithelium are rapidly lost upon weaning, in agreement with the loss of mucosal sialic acids and general sialyltransferase activity. Developmental repression of SiaT-1 is manifested in a proximal to distal gradient; SiaT-1 mRNA and protein are lost first from the duodenum and persist the longest in the ileum. We have previously documented that SiaT-1 gene expression can be transcriptionally initiated from a number of distinct tissue-specific promoter regions. Here, by criteria of mRNA mobility on agarose gels, primer extension analysis, and differential Northern hybridization, we show that the promoter previously considered to be liver-specific is operative in SiaT-1 expression in the small intestine of suckling animals. Comparison of this SiaT-1 promoter region with promoter regions of other genes exhibiting dual intestine-hepatic tissue specificity revealed a number of striking sequence similarities. Regulatory implications and consequences of small intestinal SiaT-1 expression in suckling but not in weaned animals are discussed.

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