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N. Takahashi, S. Kikuyama, K. Gen, O. Maruyama, and Y. Kato

ABSTRACT

A GH cDNA was specifically amplified from cDNAs constructed from total RNA of bullfrog (Rana catesbeiana) adenohypophyses employing the DNA polymerase chain reaction. Sequencing analysis revealed that the cDNA clone thus obtained was 654 bp in length, and included an open reading frame encoding the entire sequence of mature GH, with its signal peptide. Slight discrepancies were noted between the deduced amino acid sequence and that determined by direct protein sequencing of purified bullfrog GH or that deduced from the nucleotide sequence reported previously. The length of the bullfrog GH mRNA was estimated to be about 1·2 kb by Northern blot analysis. Homologies of nucleotide and amino acid sequences between GH and prolactin of bullfrog origin were 48% and 26% respectively. Using the cDNA as a probe, the content of GH mRNA in the pituitary of larval and adult bullfrogs was measured. GH mRNA levels were relatively low at the preclimax stage, and rose markedly during climax. In juvenile frogs, GH mRNA levels in the pituitary were extremely high and declined towards adulthood. This finding suggests that the increase in plasma and pituitary GH levels reported previously accompanies the increase in GH synthesis.

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Y Kato, K Gen, O Maruyama, K Tomizawa, and T Kato

ABSTRACT

Two types of cDNA (GTH-Iβ and -IIβ) encoding the β subunit of masu salmon (Oncorhynchus masou) gonadotrophin were cloned using the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction for pituitary mRNAs. The nucleotide sequence of GTH-Iβ cDNA was 469 bp long, encoding 137 amino acids, and GTH-IIβ cDNA was 476 bp long, encoding 142 amino acids. These two masu salmon β subunit types showed low homologies of 52% (nucleotide sequence) and 33% (amino acid sequence). The evolutionary interval between masu and chum salmon was estimated to be 5·65 and 1·43 million years by comparing GTH-Iβ and GTH-IIβ respectively. These time values are markedly inconsistent with the evolutionary time (30 million years) estimated from fossil records and an isozyme study. Southern blot analyses showed that the Iβ gene restriction fragment lengths differed among five teleosts, whereas, with one exception, the IIβ gene showed well conserved patterns. Therefore, the GTH-Iβ gene may have diverged at a faster rate than the GTH-IIβ gene.

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K Gen, O Maruyama, T Kato, K Tomizawa, K Wakabayashi, and Y Kato

ABSTRACT

Two types of cDNA (GTHα1 and -α2) encoding the α subunits of masu salmon (Oncorhynchus masou) gonadotrophin were cloned by the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction for pituitary mRNAs. The nucleotide sequences showed that the GTHα1 cDNA was 380 bp long, encoding 119 amino acids, and that GTHα2 cDNA was 365 bp long, encoding 114 amino acids. The masu salmon α subunit types had a few differences between the sequences, with homologies of 80% (nucleotide sequence) and 72% (amino acid sequence). The structural difference between the α1 and α2 subunits was predicted using hydropathic analysis. The evolutionary interval between masu and chum salmon was estimated to be 4·0 and 2·3 million years by comparing their GTHα1 and -α2 subunits respectively. These time values are roughly consistent with the evolutionary time interval (3·0 million years) estimated from fossil records and an isozyme study. Specific synthetic oligonucleotide probes were constructed and used for genomic Southern blot analyses. The restriction fragment sizes of the GTHα1 and -α2 genes were similar, and when their patterns were compared with those from four other teleosts, each species showed a different pattern from the others, but no difference between their respective α1 and α2 genes. Therefore, the structural features of the GTHα1 and -α2 genes may have diverged in a similar manner in these five teleosts.