Construction and specificity of porcine bmp15 gene reporter vector.
- Author:
Mingming QIN
;
Jianghua WEI
;
Xiaoli YU
;
Jinglong ZHANG
;
Xiaopeng LIU
;
Xiaoling MA
;
Huayan WANG
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Animals;
Bone Morphogenetic Protein 15;
genetics;
CHO Cells;
Cell Differentiation;
Cricetinae;
Cricetulus;
Female;
Genes, Reporter;
Genetic Vectors;
Mice;
Microinjections;
Myoblasts;
cytology;
Oocytes;
metabolism;
Ovary;
metabolism;
Stem Cells;
cytology;
Swine
- From:
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology
2014;30(2):203-212
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
The aim of this study is to identify the express specificity of bone morphogenetic protein 15 (Bmp15) in porcine. The pBMP15-EGFP reporter vector was constructed from the 2.2 kb fragment of porcine bmp15 promoter to trace the differentiation process of stem cells into oocyte-like cells. We used porcine ovary and Chinese Hamster Ovary cell line (CHO), mouse myoblast cell line (C2C12) and porcine amniotic fluid stem cell (pAFSC) to investigate the expression and regulation of this gene via RT-PCR, immunofluorescence, cell transfection, and microinjection methods. We also used single layer cell differentiation to detect the application potential of bmp15. The results show that bmp15 gene was specifically expressed in the porcine ovary and CHO rather than in C2C12 and pAFSC. In addition, the characteristic of tissue-specific of Bmp15 was detected on CHO instead of other cell lines by transient transfection. We also detected the expression of Bmp15 in oocyte at different development stages by immunofluorescence of fixed paraffin-embedded ovary sections. Furthermore, microinjection results show that bmp15 expressed in oocytes at 18 h of maturation in vitro, and continued up to 4-cell stage embryos. Most importantly, we found that the expression of Bmp15 started at day 12 after inducing pAFSC into oocyte-like cells by transfection; green fluorescent was visible in round cell masses. It indicated that bmp15 has the expression specificity and the pBMP15-EGFP reporter vector can be used to trace Bmp15 action in the differentiation of stem cells into germ cells.