Isolation, characterization and expression of the human Factor In the Germline alpha (FIGLA) gene in ovarian follicles and oocytes

J Huntriss, R Gosden, M Hinkins, B Oliver… - Molecular Human …, 2002 - academic.oup.com
J Huntriss, R Gosden, M Hinkins, B Oliver, D Miller, AJ Rutherford, HM Picton
Molecular Human Reproduction, 2002academic.oup.com
Abstract The Factor In the Germline alpha (FIGα) transcription factor regulates expression of
the zona pellucida proteins ZP1, ZP2 and ZP3 and is essential for folliculogenesis in the
mouse. Using the published mouse Figla sequence, BLAST searches identified a human
chromosome 2 BAC clone with high sequence identity. Using PCR primers derived from this
clone, amplicons derived from ovarian follicles and mature oocytes revealed 100% identity
with the appropriate human BAC clone, the expected homology with the mouse Figla gene …
Abstract
The Factor In the Germline alpha (FIGα) transcription factor regulates expression of the zona pellucida proteins ZP1, ZP2 and ZP3 and is essential for folliculogenesis in the mouse. Using the published mouse Figla sequence, BLAST searches identified a human chromosome 2 BAC clone with high sequence identity. Using PCR primers derived from this clone, amplicons derived from ovarian follicles and mature oocytes revealed 100% identity with the appropriate human BAC clone, the expected homology with the mouse Figla gene sequence, and homology on translation with the FIGα protein identified in the Japanese rice fish, medaka (Oryzias latipes). PCR expression profiling of this transcript revealed FIGLA mRNA expression in cDNA derived from ovarian follicles (5/5 samples from the primordial through to the secondary stage) mature oocytes (6/9 samples), and less frequently in preimplantation embryos (2/7 samples). Subsequent BLAST searches revealed the predicted full length coding sequence of the human FIGα protein which demonstrates 68 and 25% similarity overall to mouse and medaka proteins respectively, with 96 and 57% identity respectively within the basic helix–loop–helix region. This confirms our identification of the human homologue for this gene which maps to chromosome 2p12. Further work is required to understand its role in normal human oocyte development and the potential involvement in human infertility.
Oxford University Press