Abstract

Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) and its receptor (GHRHR) have long been regarded as the critical molecules for the stimulation of growth hormone (GH) synthesis and release, as well as the regulation of pituitary somatotroph expansion in vertebrates. However, little is known about their expression in the embryonic pituitaries of birds. In this study, the full-length cDNA for chicken GHRHR was cloned from the chicken pituitary. It encodes 419 amino acids and shares high homology with that of the human, rat, and mouse. As in those in mammals, chicken GHRHR is predominantly expressed in the pituitary and weakly expressed in several extra-pituitary tissues including brain, pancreas, testis, and kidney, among 12 tissues examined. Using semiquantitative reverse transcription-PCR, we further examined the expression of GH, GHRH, and GHRHR during embryonic pituitary development. The expression of GHRHR on embryonic d 8 was much lower, but abundant expression was noticed as early as embryonic d 12. In contrast, the level of pituitary GHRH mRNA peaked on d 8 and declined sharply afterwards. Interestingly, unlike those of pituitary GHRH and GHRHR, the higher expression levels of GH appeared much later (from d 16 to 20). The differential expressions of GHRH, GHRHR, and GH in the developing embryonic pituitaries not only imply that pituitary-derived GHRH (or pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide) and GHRHR may have a paracrine/autocrine role in the expansion of undifferentiated somatotroph precursor cells, but also suggest that GHRHR is likely to be involved in the somatotroph differentiation occurring at the later developmental stages.

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