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Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 281: F1148-F1156, 2001;
0363-6127/01 $5.00
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Vol. 281, Issue 6, F1148-F1156, December 2001

EEG1, a putative transporter expressed during epithelial organogenesis: comparison with embryonic transporter expression during nephrogenesis

Robert O. Stuart1,2,3, Anna Pavlova4, David Beier4, Zhixing Li2, Yelena Krijanovski4, and Sanjay K. Nigam2,3,4

1 Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, 2 Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Medicine and Pediatrics, 3 Cancer Center, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093; and 4 Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115

A screen for genes differentially regulated in a model of kidney development identified the novel gene embryonic epithelia gene 1 (EEG1). EEG1 exists as two transcripts of 2.4 and 3.5 kb that are most highly expressed at embryonic day 7 and later in the fetal liver, lung, placenta, and kidney. The EEG1 gene is composed of 14 exons spanning a 20-kb region at human chromosome 11p12 and the syntenic region of mouse chromosome 2. Six EEG1 exons have previously been assigned to a longer isoform of eosinophil major basic protein termed proteoglycan 2. Another gene distantly related to EEG1, POV1/PB39, is located 88 kb upstream from the EEG1 gene on chromosome 11. Temporal expression of 65 members of the solute carrier (SLC)-class of transport proteins was followed during kidney development using DNA arrays. POV-1 and EEG1, like glucose transporters, displayed very early maximal gene expression. In contrast, other SLC genes, such as organic anion and cation transporters, amino acid permeases, and nucleoside transporters, had maximal expression later in development. Thus, although the bulk of transporters are expressed late in kidney development, a fraction are expressed near the onset of nephrogenesis. The data raise the possibility that EEG1 and POV1 may define a new family of transport proteins involved in the transport of nutrients or metabolites in rapidly growing and/or developing tissues.

microarray; organogenesis; bioinformatics; embryonic epithelia gene 1


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