A modulatory role of the Rax homeobox gene in mature pineal gland function: Investigating the photoneuroendocrine circadian system of a Rax conditional knockout mouse

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A modulatory role of the Rax homeobox gene in mature pineal gland function : Investigating the photoneuroendocrine circadian system of a Rax conditional knockout mouse. / Rohde, Kristian; Bering, Tenna; Furukawa, Takahisa; Rath, Martin Fredensborg.

In: Journal of Neurochemistry, Vol. 143, No. 1, 10.2017, p. 100-111.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rohde, K, Bering, T, Furukawa, T & Rath, MF 2017, 'A modulatory role of the Rax homeobox gene in mature pineal gland function: Investigating the photoneuroendocrine circadian system of a Rax conditional knockout mouse', Journal of Neurochemistry, vol. 143, no. 1, pp. 100-111. https://doi.org/10.1111/jnc.14120

APA

Rohde, K., Bering, T., Furukawa, T., & Rath, M. F. (2017). A modulatory role of the Rax homeobox gene in mature pineal gland function: Investigating the photoneuroendocrine circadian system of a Rax conditional knockout mouse. Journal of Neurochemistry, 143(1), 100-111. https://doi.org/10.1111/jnc.14120

Vancouver

Rohde K, Bering T, Furukawa T, Rath MF. A modulatory role of the Rax homeobox gene in mature pineal gland function: Investigating the photoneuroendocrine circadian system of a Rax conditional knockout mouse. Journal of Neurochemistry. 2017 Oct;143(1):100-111. https://doi.org/10.1111/jnc.14120

Author

Rohde, Kristian ; Bering, Tenna ; Furukawa, Takahisa ; Rath, Martin Fredensborg. / A modulatory role of the Rax homeobox gene in mature pineal gland function : Investigating the photoneuroendocrine circadian system of a Rax conditional knockout mouse. In: Journal of Neurochemistry. 2017 ; Vol. 143, No. 1. pp. 100-111.

Bibtex

@article{63f08c230725414db07d423ad2c33de1,
title = "A modulatory role of the Rax homeobox gene in mature pineal gland function: Investigating the photoneuroendocrine circadian system of a Rax conditional knockout mouse",
abstract = "The retinal and anterior neural fold homeobox gene (Rax) controls development of the eye and the forebrain. Postnatal expression of Rax in the brain is restricted to the pineal gland, a forebrain structure devoted to melatonin synthesis. The role of Rax in pineal function is unknown. In order to investigate the role of Rax in pineal function while circumventing forebrain abnormalities of the global Rax knockout, we generated an eye and pineal-specific Rax conditional knockout mouse. Deletion of Rax in the pineal gland did not affect morphology of the gland, suggesting that Rax is not essential for pineal gland development. In contrast, deletion of Rax in the eye generated an anophthalmic phenotype. In addition to the loss of central visual pathways, the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus housing the circadian clock was absent, indicating that the retinohypothalamic tract is required for the nucleus to develop. Telemetric analyses confirmed the lack of a functional circadian clock. Arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (Aanat) transcripts, encoding the melatonin rhythm-generating enzyme, were undetectable in the pineal gland of the Rax conditional knockout under normal conditions, whereas the paired box 6 homeobox gene, known to regulate pineal development, was up-regulated. By injecting isoproterenol, which mimics a nocturnal situation in the pineal gland, we were able to induce pineal expression of Aanat in the Rax conditional knockout mouse, but Aanat transcript levels were significantly lower than those of Rax-proficient mice. Our data suggest that Rax controls pineal gene expression and via Aanat may modulate melatonin synthesis.",
author = "Kristian Rohde and Tenna Bering and Takahisa Furukawa and Rath, {Martin Fredensborg}",
year = "2017",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1111/jnc.14120",
language = "English",
volume = "143",
pages = "100--111",
journal = "Journal of Neurochemistry",
issn = "0022-3042",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A modulatory role of the Rax homeobox gene in mature pineal gland function

T2 - Investigating the photoneuroendocrine circadian system of a Rax conditional knockout mouse

AU - Rohde, Kristian

AU - Bering, Tenna

AU - Furukawa, Takahisa

AU - Rath, Martin Fredensborg

PY - 2017/10

Y1 - 2017/10

N2 - The retinal and anterior neural fold homeobox gene (Rax) controls development of the eye and the forebrain. Postnatal expression of Rax in the brain is restricted to the pineal gland, a forebrain structure devoted to melatonin synthesis. The role of Rax in pineal function is unknown. In order to investigate the role of Rax in pineal function while circumventing forebrain abnormalities of the global Rax knockout, we generated an eye and pineal-specific Rax conditional knockout mouse. Deletion of Rax in the pineal gland did not affect morphology of the gland, suggesting that Rax is not essential for pineal gland development. In contrast, deletion of Rax in the eye generated an anophthalmic phenotype. In addition to the loss of central visual pathways, the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus housing the circadian clock was absent, indicating that the retinohypothalamic tract is required for the nucleus to develop. Telemetric analyses confirmed the lack of a functional circadian clock. Arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (Aanat) transcripts, encoding the melatonin rhythm-generating enzyme, were undetectable in the pineal gland of the Rax conditional knockout under normal conditions, whereas the paired box 6 homeobox gene, known to regulate pineal development, was up-regulated. By injecting isoproterenol, which mimics a nocturnal situation in the pineal gland, we were able to induce pineal expression of Aanat in the Rax conditional knockout mouse, but Aanat transcript levels were significantly lower than those of Rax-proficient mice. Our data suggest that Rax controls pineal gene expression and via Aanat may modulate melatonin synthesis.

AB - The retinal and anterior neural fold homeobox gene (Rax) controls development of the eye and the forebrain. Postnatal expression of Rax in the brain is restricted to the pineal gland, a forebrain structure devoted to melatonin synthesis. The role of Rax in pineal function is unknown. In order to investigate the role of Rax in pineal function while circumventing forebrain abnormalities of the global Rax knockout, we generated an eye and pineal-specific Rax conditional knockout mouse. Deletion of Rax in the pineal gland did not affect morphology of the gland, suggesting that Rax is not essential for pineal gland development. In contrast, deletion of Rax in the eye generated an anophthalmic phenotype. In addition to the loss of central visual pathways, the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus housing the circadian clock was absent, indicating that the retinohypothalamic tract is required for the nucleus to develop. Telemetric analyses confirmed the lack of a functional circadian clock. Arylalkylamine N-acetyltransferase (Aanat) transcripts, encoding the melatonin rhythm-generating enzyme, were undetectable in the pineal gland of the Rax conditional knockout under normal conditions, whereas the paired box 6 homeobox gene, known to regulate pineal development, was up-regulated. By injecting isoproterenol, which mimics a nocturnal situation in the pineal gland, we were able to induce pineal expression of Aanat in the Rax conditional knockout mouse, but Aanat transcript levels were significantly lower than those of Rax-proficient mice. Our data suggest that Rax controls pineal gene expression and via Aanat may modulate melatonin synthesis.

U2 - 10.1111/jnc.14120

DO - 10.1111/jnc.14120

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28675567

VL - 143

SP - 100

EP - 111

JO - Journal of Neurochemistry

JF - Journal of Neurochemistry

SN - 0022-3042

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 179878975