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Characterization of Prolactin (PRL) and PRL Receptor (PRLR) in Chinese Soft-shelled Turtle: Molecular Identification, Ligand-receptor Interaction and Tissue Distribution

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Specialty Endocrinology
Date 2021 Oct 29
PMID 34715089
Citations 1
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Abstract

Prolactin (PRL) plays crucial roles in many physiological and pathological processes through activating its specific membrane-anchored receptor (PRLR). Although this ligand-receptor pair has been extensively studied in mammals, birds and fishes, researches examining their significance is rather scarce in reptiles. Additionally, the interaction mechanism of PRL-PRLR has abortively understood across vertebrates, since two tandem repeated ligand-binding domains of PRLR have been identified in birds and few reptiles. To lay the foundation to clarify their roles and ligand-receptor interaction in reptiles, using Chinese soft-shelled turtle as model, the cDNAs containing open reading frame of PRL and PRLR were cloned. The cloned PRL consisted of 710 bp and encoded a precursor of 228 amino acid (-aa), while PRLR was 2658 bp in length and predicted to generate a 828-aa precursor. Furthermore, the recombinant PRL protein with high-purity was prepared from Escherichia coli (E. coli) strain Rosetta gamiB (DE3) by using cobalt resin. Using the 5 × STAT5-Luciferase reporter system, we found PRLR and PRLR-M2 (the PRLR-mutant lacking membrane-distal ligand-binding domain) could be dose-dependently activated by recombinant PRL, thereby triggering the intracellular JAK2-STAT5 signaling cascade, suggesting PRL-PRLR is functional in Chinese soft-shelled turtle, and the membrane-proximal ligand-binding domain of PRLR is the critical domain involving in PRL-binding. Quantitative real-time PCR revealed that PRL was predominantly and abundantly expressed in pituitary, while PRLR exhibited ubiquitous expression in all of the tissues examined. Collectively, our data indicate the PRL-PRLR pair may function in reptiles including Chinese soft-shelled turtle, in a way similar to that in birds.

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PMID: 38228063 PMC: 10823133. DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2024.103422.