Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Genomic basis for antifreeze glycopeptide heterogeneity and abundance in Antarctic fishes
- Cold-inducible gene transcription: Δ9-desaturases and the adaptive control of membrane lipid composition
- Ion transport in teleosts: identification and expression of ion transporting proteins in branchial and intestinal epithelia of the European eel
- Temperature adaptation: selective expression of myosin heavy chain genes and muscle function in carp
- Crustacean genes involved in growth
- Use of the zebrafish for studies of genes involved in the control of development
- Myosin heavy chain isogene expression in carp
- Rainbow trout myosin heavy chain polymorphism during development
- Transient expression of reporter genes in fish as a measure of promoter efficiency
- The use of transient lacZ expression in fish embryos for comparative analysis of cloned regulatory elements
- Molecular characterization of prolactin receptor in tilapia
- Index
Molecular characterization of prolactin receptor in tilapia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Genomic basis for antifreeze glycopeptide heterogeneity and abundance in Antarctic fishes
- Cold-inducible gene transcription: Δ9-desaturases and the adaptive control of membrane lipid composition
- Ion transport in teleosts: identification and expression of ion transporting proteins in branchial and intestinal epithelia of the European eel
- Temperature adaptation: selective expression of myosin heavy chain genes and muscle function in carp
- Crustacean genes involved in growth
- Use of the zebrafish for studies of genes involved in the control of development
- Myosin heavy chain isogene expression in carp
- Rainbow trout myosin heavy chain polymorphism during development
- Transient expression of reporter genes in fish as a measure of promoter efficiency
- The use of transient lacZ expression in fish embryos for comparative analysis of cloned regulatory elements
- Molecular characterization of prolactin receptor in tilapia
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Prolactin (PRL) is a polypeptide hormone, which in all vertebrates except Cyclostoms is synthesized in the adenohypophysis (Schriebman, 1986). PRL belongs to a family of structurally and functionally related hormones which include growth hormone, placenta lactogen, proliferin in mammals and somatolactin in fish. Based on amino acid sequence homologies, it has been reported that these proteins have arisen by duplication of an ancestral gene (Bewley & Li, 1971; Takayama et al., 1991). Although in man, rat and turkey, PRL is the product of a single gene, the hormone occurs in multiple molecular forms, cleaved, phosphorylated or glycosylated whose discrete functions remain a matter of debate (Lewis et al., 1984; Clapp et al., 1989; Brooks et al., 1990). Among teleost fish, PRL was isolated in the tilapia species Oreochromis mossambicus (Specker et al., 1985), salmonids (Idler, Shamsuzzaman & Burton, 1978; Kawauchi et al., 1983; Prunet & Houdebine, 1984; Anderson, Skibeli & Kautvik, 1989), carp (Yasuda et al., 1987) and eel (Suzuki et al., 1991). Amino acid sequence identity between fish and mammalian PRLs is only 20–30% whereas it increases to 60–80% between fish PRLs. The major difference between fish and mammalian PRLs is the absence of one disulfide loop in the N-terminal region. Nucleotide and polypeptide sequences analysis of these fish PRLs revealed the existence of two distinct, albeit similar, genes in some species. This is the case for salmon or carp (Yasuda, Itoh & Kawauchi, 1986, 1987).
In tilapia species, Oreochromis mossambicus and O. niloticus, a somewhat different situation was described, and two much less similar PRL molecules were characterized (Specker et al., 1985; Yamaguchi et al., 1988; Rentier-Delrue et al., 1989).
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- Gene Expression and Manipulation in Aquatic Organisms , pp. 201 - 212Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996