Abstract
Glutamine synthetase (GS) is a differentiation marker of retina glial cells. It is expressed in the chicken neural retina at a particularly high level, is inducible by glucocorticoids and is always confined to Müller glia. This study investigated the molecular basis for tissue and cell-type specific expression of the GS gene. A high level of GS expression in the retina was found to coincide with the accumulation of a relatively high level of GS mRNA in this tissue. The gliatoxic agent α-aminoadipic acid, which can selectively destroy glia cells, was used to demonstrate that restriction of GS induction to Müller glia is controlled at a transcriptional level. Cortisol could induce accumulation of GS mRNA and transcription of the GS gene in Müller glia but not in retina neurons. Glia and neurons were also found to differ in their ability to express the glucocorticoid inducible CAT construct, pΔG46TCO, which is controlled by a ‘simple GRE’ promoter. When introduced into cells of retina tissue, this construct was cortisol-inducible in glia whereas in neurons it was only slightly inducible or not at all. Introduction of a glucocorticoid receptor expression vector into the cells facilitated induction of the CAT construct in neurons. Analysis by immunoblotting revealed that expression of the glucocorticoid receptor protein is predominantly restricted to Müller glia. These results suggest that differential levels of glucocorticoid receptor expression in glia and neurons might be the basis for cell-type specific induction of GS.
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