학술논문

5′ UTR variants in the quantitative trait gene Hnrnph1 support reduced 5′ UTR usage and hnRNP H protein as a molecular mechanism underlying reduced methamphetamine sensitivity
Document Type
article
Source
The FASEB Journal. 34(7)
Subject
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Human Genome
Methamphetamine
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Underpinning research
5' Untranslated Regions
Animals
Central Nervous System Stimulants
Drug Resistance
Exons
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Expression Regulation
HEK293 Cells
Heterogeneous-Nuclear Ribonucleoproteins
Humans
Male
Mice
Mice
Congenic
Mice
Inbred C57BL
Mice
Inbred DBA
Motor Activity
Polymorphism
Genetic
RNA
Messenger
alternative splicing
functional variants
positional cloning
psychostimulant
RNA binding protein
untranslated regions
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Physiology
Medical Physiology
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medical physiology
Language
Abstract
We previously identified a 210 kb region on chromosome 11 (50.37-50.58 Mb, mm10) containing two protein-coding genes (Hnrnph1, Rufy1) that was necessary for reduced methamphetamine-induced locomotor activity in C57BL/6J congenic mice harboring DBA/2J polymorphisms. Gene editing of a small deletion in the first coding exon supported Hnrnph1 as a quantitative trait gene. We have since shown that Hnrnph1 mutants also exhibit reduced methamphetamine-induced reward, reinforcement, and dopamine release. However, the quantitative trait variants (QTVs) that modulate Hnrnph1 function at the molecular level are not known. Nine single nucleotide polymorphisms and seven indels distinguish C57BL/6J from DBA/2J within Hnrnph1, including four variants within the 5' untranslated region (UTR). Here, we show that a 114 kb introgressed region containing Hnrnph1 and Rufy1 was sufficient to cause a decrease in MA-induced locomotor activity. Gene-level transcriptome analysis of striatal tissue from 114 kb congenics vs Hnrnph1 mutants identified a nearly perfect correlation of fold-change in expression for those differentially expressed genes that were common to both mouse lines, indicating functionally similar effects on the transcriptome and behavior. Exon-level analysis (including noncoding exons) revealed decreased 5' UTR usage of Hnrnph1 and immunoblot analysis identified a corresponding decrease in hnRNP H protein in 114 kb congenic mice. Molecular cloning of the Hnrnph1 5' UTR containing all four variants (but none of them individually) upstream of a reporter induced a decrease in reporter signal in both HEK293 and N2a cells, thus, identifying a set of QTVs underlying molecular regulation of Hnrnph1.