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Title: CONSTITUTIVE EXPRESSION OF PEROXISOME PROLIFERATOR-ACTIVATED RECEPTOR ALPHA-REGULATED GENES IN DWARF MICE

Author
item STAUBER, ANJA - CIIT, RTPARK, NC
item BROWN-BORG, HOLLY - CIIT, RTPARK, NC
item LIU, JIE - CIIT, RTPARK, NC
item WAALKES, MICHAEL - CIIT, RTPARK, NC
item LAUGHTER, ASHLEY - CIIT, RTPARK, NC
item STABEN, REBECCA - CIIT, RTPARK, NC
item COLEY, JACQUELINE - CIIT, RTPARK, NC
item SWANSON, CYNTHIA - CIIT, RTPARK, NC
item Voss, Kenneth
item CORTON, J.CHRISTOPHER - CIIT, RTPARK, NC

Submitted to: Molecular Pharmacology
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 10/15/2004
Publication Date: 12/1/2004
Citation: Stauber, A.J., Brown-Borg, H., Liu, J., Waalkes, M.P., Laughter, A., Staben, R.A., Coley, J.C., Swanson, C., Voss, K.A., Kopchick, J.J., Corton, J.C. 2004. Constitutive expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha-regulated genes in dwarf mice. Molecular Pharmacology. 67:681-694.

Interpretive Summary: Fumonisins are fungal toxins found in corn and food. They cause cancer and caradiovascular dysfunction in animals and are considered risk factors for cancer and cardiovasculara disease in humans. Fumonisins disrupt metabolism and cause accumulation of sphingosine, a type of fat. Sphingosine can activate a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPAR-alpha), an important cell signaling molecule, under some conditions. To better understand how fumonisins impact human health, it is important to understand how they affect gene expression. The PPAR-alpha regulates genes involved in fat metabolism, cell growth, stress response and cardiovascular disease, processes that are involved in both cancer development and fumonisin toxicity. Dwarf mice have metabolic defects that decrease expression of some factors contributing to cancer and cardiovasculara disease and peroxisome proliferator compounds such as WY14,643 similarly affect many of these factors in wild-type mice. Studies were therefore undertaken to determine extent to which gene transcription in untreated dwarf and WY14,643-treated wild type mice are similar. The results showed a significant overlap int he expression of genes affecting fat metabolism, stress response, and dibrinogen (a factor for cardiovascular disease) and that expression of the PPAR-alpha gene plays an important role in these changes. The findings increase understanding of role of PPAR-alpha and gene expression in diseases that have been associated with fumonisins.

Technical Abstract: Fumonisin mycotoxins are found in corn and corn-based foods. They are carcinogenic and cause cardiovascular dysfunction in animals. they are suspected risk factors for cancer and possibly cardiovascular disease in humans. There is evidence that fumonisin's mechanism of action involves peroxisome proliferation, possibly as a result of activation of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha) by sphingoid bases accumulating in tissues following fumonisin exposure. Dwarf mice have defects in growth hormone secretion or signaling that are associated with decreases in factors contributing to cancer and cardioavascular disease. Because peroxisome proliferator compounds (PP) similarly affect some of these factors in wild-type mice, studies were done to determine if overlapping gene transcriptional programs seen in untreated dwarf mice and PP-treated wild-type mice underlies these similarities. Transcript profiling showed a significant overlap in the expression of genes differentially regulated in control Snell dwarf mice (Pit-1dw) compared to phentoypically normal heterozygote (+/dw) control mice and those altered by the PP WY-14,643 in +/dw mice. The genes affected included those involved in beta- and omega-oxidation of fatty acids (Acox1, Cyp4a10, Cyp4a14), in stress responses (the chaperonin, T-complex protein1epsilon), and in cardiovascular disease (fibrinogen). The levels of some of these gene products were also altered in other dwarf mouse models, including Ames, Little, and growth hormone receptor-null mice. The constitutive increases in PPARalpha-regulated genes may be partly caused by increased expresson of PPARalpha mRNA and protein as observed in the livers of control Snell dwarf mice. These results suggest that some beneficial effects associated with the dwarf phenotype are caused by constitutive activation of PPARalpha and regulated genes. Because fumonisins are suspected peroxisomal proliferators, understanding the role of PPARalpha and gene expression during peroxisome proliferation will help elucidate fumonisin's mechanism of action.