Abstract
To investigate the mechanisms regulating neurofilament gene expression, we generated transgenic mice with high copy number of the intact human neurofilament light (NF-L) and heavy (NF-H) genes. Overexpression in transgenic mice of NF-L mRNA from 3- to 5-fold in different regions of the central nervous system (CNS) resulted only in a mild increase of 10–50% in the levels of NF-L proteins. The failure to enhance NF-L protein content was not due to interspecies differences in posttranscriptional NF-L regulation. For instance, based on specific immunodetection, it is estimated that human NF-L proteins composed 80% of total NF-L content in the spinal cord of transgenics. In contrast to the situation with NF-L, the CNS of transgenic mice bearing multiple copies of the human NF-H gene showed comparable increases in the levels of NF-H mRNA and proteins. These results suggest that the NF-L and NF-H genes are subject to different posttranscriptional regulation in the CNS. In vivo labeling of newly synthesized proteins by injection of [ 35S]methionine in the spinal cords of normal and transgenic mice provided evidence that the posttranscriptional regulation of NF-L expression in the CNS must occur, at least in part, at the level of translation.
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