PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

A Common Phenotype Polymorphism in Mammalian Brains Defined by Concomitant Production of Prolactin and Growth Hormone.

  • Nathalie Daude,
  • Inyoul Lee,
  • Taek-Kyun Kim,
  • Christopher Janus,
  • John Paul Glaves,
  • Hristina Gapeshina,
  • Jing Yang,
  • Brian D Sykes,
  • George A Carlson,
  • Leroy E Hood,
  • David Westaway

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149410
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. e0149410

Abstract

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Pituitary Prolactin (PRL) and Growth Hormone (GH) are separately controlled and sub-serve different purposes. Surprisingly, we demonstrate that extra-pituitary expression in the adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS) is coordinated at mRNA and protein levels. However this was not a uniform effect within populations, such that wide inter-individual variation was superimposed on coordinate PRL/GH expression. Up to 44% of individuals in healthy cohorts of mice and rats showed protein levels above the norm and coordinated expression of PRL and GH transcripts above baseline occurred in the amygdala, frontal lobe and hippocampus of 10% of human subjects. High levels of PRL and GH present in post mortem tissue were often presaged by altered responses in fear conditioning and stress induced hyperthermia behavioral tests. Our data define a common phenotype polymorphism in healthy mammalian brains, and, given the pleiotropic effects known for circulating PRL and GH, further consequences of coordinated CNS over-expression may await discovery.