d-Amino-acid oxidase (DAO) is known to be associated with schizophrenia. Since the expression of DAO gene had been reported
to be very low in LEA rats, we examined LEA/SENDAI rats in detail. These rats did not have DAO activity, enzyme protein or
mRNA encoding this enzyme. Sequencing of the 5′-upstream region of the DAO gene revealed the deletion of one triplet in the
15 TAA repeats approximately 700-bp upstream of the transcription start point. A 1.3-kb upstream fragment containing the TAA
repeats and the transcription start point was inserted into a reporter vector and was transfected into COS-1, NRK-52E and
CCL-PK1 cells. Although the fragments containing 15 or 14 repeats had high promoter activity, the fragment containing 13 repeats
had very weak activity. Electrophoretic mobility-shift assays showed that the nuclear extracts from COS-1 and COS-7 cells
had proteins that bound to the oligonucleotides containing the TAA repeats. These results suggest that the TAA repeats are
important for expression of the DAO gene. The LEA/SENDAI rats lacking DAO would be a useful tool for the investigations aimed
at the elucidation of the relationships between this flavoenzyme and schizophrenia.
Keywords
d-Amino-acid oxidase - Rat mutant - Promoter - Triplet repeats - Schizophrenia