Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8477894 | Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2011 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The contribution of steroidogenic factor 1 (SF-1) to the gene expression profile of Y1 mouse adrenocortical cells was evaluated using short hairpin RNAs to knockdown SF-1. The reduced level of SF-1 RNA was associated with global changes that affected the accumulation of more than 2000 transcripts. Among the down-regulated transcripts were several with functions in steroidogenesis that were affected to different degrees-i.e., Mc2r > Scarb1 > Star â¥Â Hsd3b1 > Cyp11b1. For Star and Cyp11b1, the different levels of expression correlated with the amount of residual SF-1 bound to the proximal promoter regions. The knockdown of SF-1 did not affect the accumulation of Cyp11a1 transcripts even though the amount of SF-1 bound to the proximal promoter of the gene was reduced to background levels. Our results indicate that transcripts with functions in steroidogenesis vary in their dependence on SF-1 for constitutive expression. On a more global scale, SF-1 knockdown affects the accumulation of a large number of transcripts, most of which are not recognizably involved in steroid hormone biosynthesis.
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Authors
Bernard P. Schimmer, Jennivine Tsao, Martha Cordova, Sara Mostafavi, Quaid Morris, Joshua O. Scheys,