Abstract

Glucocorticoids (GC) are steroid hormones, which regulate metabolism and immune function. Synthetic GCs, or corticosteroids (CS), have appreciable clinical utility via their ability to suppress inflammation in immune-mediated diseases like asthma and rheumatoid arthritis. Recent work has provided insight to novel GC-induced genes that mediate their anti-inflammatory effects, including glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ). Since GILZ comprises an important part of GC action, its regulation by both drug and hormone will influence CS therapy. In addition, GILZ expression is often employed as a biomarker of GC action, which requires judicious selection of sampling time. Understanding the in vivo regulation of GILZ mRNA expression over time will provide insight into both the physiological regulation of GILZ by endogenous GC and the dynamics of its enhancement by CS. A highly quantitative qRT-PCR assay was developed for measuring GILZ mRNA expression in tissues obtained from normal and CS-treated rats. This assay was applied to measure GILZ mRNA expression in eight tissues; to determine its endogenous regulation over time; and to characterize its dynamics in adipose tissue, muscle, and liver following treatment with CS. We demonstrate that GILZ mRNA is expressed in several tissues. GILZ mRNA expression in adipose tissue displayed a robust circadian rhythm that was entrained with the circadian oscillation of endogenous corticosterone; and is strongly enhanced by acute and chronic dosing. Single dosing also enhanced GILZ mRNA in muscle and liver, but the dynamics varied. In conclusion, GILZ is widely expressed in the rat and highly regulated by endogenous and exogenous GCs.

Highlights

  • Glucocorticoids (GCs) are a class of pleiotropic steroid hormones extensively involved in regulating development, metabolism, and immune function

  • glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ) mRNA expression in normal animals Expression levels of GILZ were measured in liver, spleen, thymus, lung, skeletal muscle, kidney, heart, and adipose tissue from normal male Wistar rats

  • We demonstrate that varying levels of GILZ mRNA expression are seen across several tissues

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Summary

Introduction

Glucocorticoids (GCs) are a class of pleiotropic steroid hormones extensively involved in regulating development, metabolism, and immune function. They are produced endogenously in the adrenal cortex and regulated by the HPA axis in a negative-feedback fashion. GCs have wide-ranging physiological effects owing to the ubiquitous distribution of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) across most tissues in the body. They play a major role in regulating the production, storage, use, and distribution of substrates for systemic energy metabolism (Dallman et al 1993). GCs possess potent immune suppressive effects that are clinically exploited through the pharmacologic use of corticosteroids (CS) for anti-inflammatory therapy

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