Retinoic acid- and phorbol ester-induced neuronal differentiation down-regulates caveolin expression in GnRH neurons

2008 
J. Neurochem. (2008) 104, 1577–1587. Abstract GN11 and GT1-7 are immortalized gonadotropin-releasing hormone-positive murine cell lines exhibiting the features of immature olfactory neurons and differentiated hypothalamic neurons, respectively. Using electron microscopy and biochemical assays (RT-PCR and immunoblotting) we determined the presence of numerous caveolae invaginations and of caveolin-1 and -2 mRNAs and proteins in GN11 cells, and their absence in GT1-7 cells. The lack of caveolins in GT1-7 cells might be due to the silencing of gene transcription caused by estrogen receptor α whose inhibitory activity in GN11 cells could be counter-balanced by co-expression of caveolin-permissive estrogen receptor β. To test whether the unique expression of caveolins in GN11 cells is related to their immature state, we treated GN11 cells for 24–72 h with retinoic acid or phorbol ester. Both treatments led to neuronal differentiation of GN11 cells, as shown by emission of long neuritic processes, increased expression of growth cone-associated protein-43 and appearance of voltage-gated K+ and Ca2+ channel currents. Concurrently, caveolins 1 and 2, and estrogen receptor β were down-regulated in differentiated GN11, whereas estrogen receptor α was unaffected by differentiation. We conclude that caveolin expression in GN11 neurons is down-regulated upon differentiation and up-regulated by estrogen receptor β.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    42
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []