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Query: UNIPROT:P01178 (oxytocin)
15,767 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The activation of the magnocellular oxytocin system by different physiological stimuli will require specific genomic responses that may or may not reflect the electrical and short-term secretory activity of the neurones. One of the main determinants of synthetic activity is the rate of transcription and this can be altered acutely by the action of inducible transcription factors (iTFs). Having shown that the expression of two iTFs, the protein products of the c-fos and c-jun genes, does not correlate directly to the electrical activity of magnocellular neurones (Luckman et al., 1994) the expression of leucine zipper iTF mRNAs was measured following different stimuli using combined radioactive and non-radioactive in situ hybridization. Stimuli that are dependent on brainstem afferents such as parturition and systemic injection of cholecystokinin caused co-induction of c-fos and c-jun in oxytocin neurones. Mild osmotic stimulation, a stimulus dependent on forebrain afferents, induced c-fos, fos B and jun B, but inhibited c-jun. Similar patterns of leucine zipper iTF expression have been noted in cultured cells following activation of protein kinases C and A, respectively. Input from the brainstem appears to be mediated, at least in part, by noradrenaline acting on alpha(1)-adrenoceptors. While the forebrain inputs are not well characterised they do appear to include a glutaminergic component that may activate a variety of receptors. Interestingly, another member of the leucine zipper family known to be induced by protein kinase A, inducible cAMP early repressor (ICER), that was previously thought to be restricted to the pineal gland, was expressed in magnocellular neurones following osmotic stimulation but not parturition. Furthermore, the differential expression of iTFs is not limited to this family. Osmotic stimulation influences c-fos, but it also causes the expression of NGFI-A and NGFI-B, members of the zinc finger family of iTFs. By contrast, an acute suckling stimulus is able to induce c-fos and NGFI-A, but not nGFI-B.
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PMID:Stimulus-specific expression of inducible transcription factors in identified oxytocin neurones. 871 50

Uterine activation is associated with increased oxytocin receptor (OXTR) expression and myometrial sensitivity to oxytocin. The OXTR promoter contains binding sites for CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein (CEBP) and nuclear factor-kappa B p65 (RELA). RELA and CEBP beta (CEBPB) play a synergistic role in OXTR promoter activation. We created deletions in a DNA construct consisting of 850 bp upstream of the transcription start site linked to luc reporter to identify the CIS element of the OXTR promoter responsible for the synergistic activation by RELA and CEBPB. Deletion from -712 to -692 bp eliminated synergy, demonstrating that the critical region lies within these 20 bp. Binding studies showed that this sequence binds both RELA and CEBPB. The 20-bp critical region for synergistic activation of OXTR requires full-length RELA but only the basic leucine zipper domain of CEBPB.
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PMID:Synergistic regulation of human oxytocin receptor promoter by CCAAT/ enhancer-binding protein and RELA. 2173 68