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Roberta Binder, Clinton C. MacDonald, John B. E. Burch, Catherine B. Lazier, David L. Williams, Expression of Endogenous and Transfected Apolipoprotein II and Vitellogenin II Genes in an Estrogen Responsive Chicken Liver Cell Line, Molecular Endocrinology, Volume 4, Issue 2, 1 February 1990, Pages 201–208, https://doi.org/10.1210/mend-4-2-201
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Abstract
A recently described chicken liver cell line, LMH, was characterized to evaluate responsiveness to estrogen. Expression of the endogenous apolipoprotein (apo) II gene was induced by 17 β-estradiol when LMH cells were cultured with chicken serum. The response was low and yielded apoll mRNA at only 0.3% of the level seen in estrogenized rooster liver. Higher levels of apoll mRNA were achieved when LMH cells were transiently transfected with an expression plasmid for estrogen receptor. A transfected apoll gene was strongly expressed only when cotransfected with receptor. Expression of the endogenous vitellogenin (VTG) II gene was not detected. However, when cotransfected with a receptor expression plasmid, VTG II reporter plasmids were expressed in LMH cells in response to 17 β- estradiol. These results suggest that estrogen responsiveness of LMH cells is limited by the availability of functional receptor. Low levels of estrogen receptor mRNA were detected in LMH cells, and receptor binding sites and mRNA were greatly increased following transient transfection with a receptor expression plasmid. Using this transient transfection protocol, several VTG II reporter plasmids were compared in LMH cells and chick embryo fibroblasts. A plasmid containing VTG II estrogen response elements linked to a heterologous promoter was regulated by estrogen in both cell types. In contrast, reporter plasmids containing the VTG II promoter were regulated by estrogen in LMH cells but were not expressed at all in chick embryo fibro-blasts. These results suggest that regulation of the VTG II gene involves cell type-specific elements in addition to estrogen response elements. LMH cells will provide a homologous cell culture model for the analysis of liver-specific and estrogen-responsive transcriptional elements in avian genes.
Author notes
This work was supported by NIH Grant DK-18171 (to D.L.W.), NIH Grant CA-06927, and Public Health Service Grant 35535 (to J.B.E.B.), Medical Research Council of Canada Grant MT4880 (to C.B.L.), and NIH predoctoral award (National Research Service Award) GM-08065 (to R.B.).