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Originally published as MBC in Press, 10.1091/mbc.E02-03-0127 on August 6, 2002
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Vol. 13, Issue 10, 3696-3705, October 2002

An Endogenous RNA Transcript Antisense to CNGalpha 1 Cation Channel mRNA

Chin-Hung Cheng,* David Tai-Wai Yew,dagger Hiu-Yee Kwan,* Qing Zhou,* Yu Huang,* Yong Liu,Dagger Wing-Yee Chan,Dagger and Xiaoqiang Yao*§

 *Departments of Physiology,  dagger Anatomy, and  Dagger Anatomical and Cellular Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China

CNG channels are cyclic nucleotide-gated Ca2+-permeable channels that are suggested to be involved in the activity-dependent alterations of synaptic strength that are thought to underlie information storage in the CNS. In this study, we isolated an endogenous RNA transcript antisense to CNGalpha 1 mRNA. This transcript was capable of down-regulating the expression of sense CNGalpha 1 in the Xenopus oocyte expression system. RT-PCR, Northern blot, and in situ hybridization analyses showed that the transcript was coexpressed with CNGalpha 1 mRNA in many regions of human brain, notably in those regions that were involved in long-term potentiation and long-term depression, such as hippocampal CA1 and CA3, dentate gyrus, and cerebellar Purkinje layer. Comparison of expression patterns between adult and fetal cerebral cortex revealed that there were concurrent developmental changes in the expression levels of anti-CNG1 and CNGalpha 1. Treatment of human glioma cell T98 with thyroid hormone T3 caused a significant increase in anti-CNG1 expression and a parallel decrease in sense CNGalpha 1 expression. These data suggest that the suppression of CNGalpha 1 expression by anti-CNG1 may play an important role in neuronal functions, especially in synaptic plasticity and cortical development. Endogenous antisense RNA-mediated regulation may represent a new mechanism through which the activity of ion channels can be regulated in the human CNS.


§ Corresponding author. E-mail address: yao2068{at}cuhk.edu.hk.


Molecular Biology of the Cell
Vol. 13, 3696-3705, October 2002
Copyright © 2002 by The American Society for Cell Biology






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