Abstract

Cystic fibrosis (CF), a common lethal pulmonary disorder in Caucasians, is caused by mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator gene (CFTR) that disturbs fluid homeostasis and host defense in target organs. The effects of CFTR and delta508-CFTR were assessed in transgenic mice that 1) lack CFTR expression (Cftr-/-); 2) express the human delta508 CFTR (CFTR(delta508)); 3) overexpress the normal human CFTR (CFTR(tg)) in respiratory epithelial cells. Genes were selected from Affymetrix Murine Gene-Chips analysis and subjected to functional classification, k-means clustering, promoter cis-elements/modules searching, literature mining, and pathway exploring. Genomic responses to Cftr-/- were not corrected by expression of CFTR(delta508). Genes regulating host defense, inflammation, fluid and electrolyte transport were similarly altered in Cftr-/- and CFTR(delta508) mice. CFTR(delta508) induced a primary disturbance in expression of genes regulating redox and antioxidant systems. Genomic responses to CFTR(tg) were modest and were not associated with lung pathology. CFTR(tg) and CFTR(delta508) induced genes encoding heat shock proteins and other chaperones but did not activate the endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation pathway. RNAs encoding proteins that directly interact with CFTR were identified in each of the CFTR mouse models, supporting the hypothesis that CFTR functions within a multiprotein complex whose members interact at the level of protein-protein interactions and gene expression. Promoters of genes influenced by CFTR shared common regulatory elements, suggesting that their co-expression may be mediated by shared regulatory mechanisms. Genes and pathways involved in the response to CFTR may be of interest as modifiers of CF.

Highlights

  • Distributed primarily in the apical regions of secretory epithelia [2]

  • CFTR⌬508 mRNA was detected in RNA isolated from the lungs of CFTR⌬508 mice at levels similar to that of the endogenous murine CFTR, while the expression of hCFTR in the CFTRtg mice was increased. mCftr expression was not changed in the CFTRtg and CFTR⌬508/Cftrϩ/ϩ mice as compared with the Cftrϩ/ϩ mice (Fig. 1)

  • In the present transgenic mouse models, genomic responses to CFTR deficiency were not corrected by expression of the CFTR⌬508 mutant protein in respiratory epithelial cells

Read more

Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Wild-type (FVB-N) mice (Cftrϩ/ϩ) were compared with FABP-hCFTRtg, CftrϪ/Ϫ mice (CftrϪ/Ϫ) [11] and mice expressing CFTR⌬508 in the respiratory epithelium in CftrϪ/Ϫ background, and mice in which the normal human CFTR was selectively expressed in bronchiolar and alveolar respiratory epithelial cells (CFTRtg) in Cftrϩ/ϩ background, previously

Nomenclature and corresponding genotype
Comparison of
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call