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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The androgen receptor (AR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor member of the nuclear receptor superfamily. The existence of alternatively spliced variants is well recognised for several members of this superfamily, most of them having functional importance. For example, several testicular oestrogen receptor variants have been suggested to play a role in the regulation of spermatogenesis. However, information on AR variants is mostly related to cancer and
androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS) cases. The objective of this study was to investigate the expression of AR variants in the testis from humans and other vertebrates. Four AR variants [ARD2Stop, ARD223Stop, ARD3 and ARD4(120)] were identified in human testis. ARD2Stop and ARD3, with exon 2 or 3 deleted, respectively, were also expressed in human liver, lung, kidney and heart. In addition, ARD2Stop was expressed in rat and gilthead seabream testis, while an ARD3 was detected in African clawed frog testis. This is the first report revealing the existence of AR variants in the testis of evolutionarily distant vertebrate species and in nonpathological tissues. These data suggest the functional importance of these novel AR forms and demonstrate a complexity in AR signalling that is not exclusive of pathological conditions.
Description
Keywords
Alternative splicing Variants Transcripts Sparus auratus Androgen receptor
Citation
Laurentino, S. S.; Pinto, P. I. S.; Tomas, J.; Cavaco, J. E. B.; Sousa, M.; Barros, A.; Power, D. M.; Canario, A. V. M.; Socorro, S. Identification of androgen receptor variants in testis from humans and other vertebrates, Andrologia, 45, 3, 187-194, 2013.
Publisher
Wiley