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The testicular and epididymal fluids of ram, boar, and stallion were analyzed by means of one-dimensional and two-dimensional gelatin gel zymography. Five main gelatinolytic bands were revealed in the ram and at least seven were observed in the boar and stallion. These proteolytic bands showed regionalized distribution throughout the organs. The two main proteolytic activities at around 54–66 kDa retrieved in all three species were inhibited by EDTA and phenanthroline, indicating that they were metallo-dependent enzymes. The activity of some of the low-molecular-weight gelatinases was also decreased by EDTA, whereas others were inhibited by serine protease inhibitors. One of the main proteases at 60–62 kDa from the caput fluid of the stallion and the ram was N-terminal sequenced; in both cases, high sequence homology was found with the N-terminal of the matrix-metalloproteinase-2 pro-form (pro-MMP-2). Antibodies against MMP-2, MMP-3, and MMP-9 gelatinases confirmed the regional distribution in the fluids of pre -, pro-, active, or degraded forms of these metalloproteases in all three species. We also observed the presence of acrosin in epididymal fluids, which was probably released by dead spermatozoa, but this enzyme did not explain all the serine protease activity. Moreover, the majority of this enzyme is bound to the protease inhibitor α2-macroglobulin, which is present in the fluids of all three species. TIMP-2, a potent inhibitor of MMPs, was present in the fluid of the caput regions in the ram and boar, and in the caput and caudal fluids of the stallion. This study demonstrated that similar types of proteases and inhibitors are regionally distributed in the epididymal fluids of three domestic species, suggesting an identical role in the sperm maturation process, the plasticity of this organ, or both.
Although oxytocin and its receptor have been identified in human ovary, its regulatory role in granulosa cell or corpus luteum function has not been clearly defined. To better understand oxytocin action in the human ovary, we have characterized the expression and function of oxytocin receptors in an immortalized human granulosa-lutein cell line, HGL5. Expression of oxytocin receptor mRNA was demonstrated by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis, and by specific binding of an iodinated oxytocin antagonist (apparent dissociation constant of 131 ± 0.15 pM, and a Bmax of 12 ± 0.5 fmol/μg DNA). Receptor levels were down-regulated by serum starvation, and rapidly up-regulated by serum restoration. Stimulation of protein kinase C activity increased oxytocin receptor levels in a concentration-dependent manner. Conversely, protein kinase C inhibition blocked up-regulation of oxytocin receptors. Treatment of cells with 10 nM oxytocin resulted in a rapid, transient increase in intracellular Ca2 , and the response was blocked by an oxytocin antagonist. Because HGL5 cells secrete progesterone and estradiol in response to agents that elevate intracellular cAMP concentrations, we studied the effect of oxytocin on steroid production. Oxytocin enhanced the effects of forskolin on progesterone production. These results suggest that oxytocin augments the activity of luteotropins in vivo. Our studies are the first to show an ovarian cell line that expresses functional oxytocin receptors. These cells can serve as a useful model for studying oxytocin signal pathways and their cross-talk with respect to progesterone synthesis. These cells also will be useful in the analysis of mechanisms of oxytocin receptor regulation, including regulation of its gene.
The oxytocin-like peptide of most Australian marsupials is mesotocin, which stimulates uterine contractions and is important for normal birth in the tammar wallaby. Female marsupials have two uteri and, in monovular species such as the tammar, one uterus is gravid with a single fetus, whereas the contralateral uterus is nongravid. A significant increase in myometrial mesotocin receptor concentrations occurs only in the gravid uterus on Day 23 of the 26-day gestation. This study examined whether or not mesotocin receptors are present in the myometrium and are up-regulated at the equivalent stage of the luteal phase in unmated tammars. In contrast to the marked increase in mesotocin receptor mRNA and protein concentrations in the myometrium of the gravid uterus during pregnancy, receptors did not increase in the unmated animals. There were also no significant differences between the two uteri, except on Day 27. Plasma profiles of peripheral estradiol-17β and progesterone did not differ significantly between pregnant and nonpregnant cycles. However, progesterone concentrations were significantly lower on Day 1 postpartum compared with Day 27 of the nonpregnant cycle. In pregnant tammars, the molar ratio of circulating estradiol-17β to progesterone increased significantly between Day 25 of gestation and 1 day postpartum, but was not correlated with an increase in mesotocin receptor concentrations in either uterus. The data confirm that a local fetal influence is more important than systemic factors, such as estrogen, in the regulation of uterine mesotocin receptors in the tammar wallaby.
Cryopreservation of sheep embryos with ethylene glycol as a protectant appears to be more effective than glycerol, particularly at the morula stage, as has been demonstrated on the basis of in vitro and in vivo development rates after thawing. In this study we compare the ultrastructure of fresh morulae, thawed morulae, and blastocysts cryopreserved with either ethylene glycol or glycerol at the electron microscopic level, to look for cellular damage that could be responsible for proven differences in embryo survival after transfer. Embryos cryopreserved with glycerol showed unequal degrees of conservation even among blastomeres within a single embryo. In morulae, inner blastomeres were completely damaged, whereas external ones appeared to be intact. Both morulae and blastocysts cryopreserved with ethylene glycol showed a higher uniformity in blastomere conservation than embryos with glycerol. The most remarkable features in this experimental group were the presence of desmosomes following tight junctions between blastomeres and the presence of many microvilli on the outer surface of external blastomeres. These characteristics are similar in fresh embryos of the control group. Our results show that ethylene glycol protects membrane and cytoplasmic structures of embryonic cells from cryoinjury much better than glycerol. In vivo survival of embryos confirmed the ultrastructural observations. A limited permeability of glycerol would explain the observed ultrastructural differences in blastomere integrity, which depends on blastomere location and the differences between morulae and blastocysts. We conclude that the low reproductive yield after cryopreservation using glycerol can be attributed to the lack of protection of inner cells.
We have studied Golgi apparatus dynamics during mouse oocyte in vitro maturation, employing both live imaging with the fluorescent lipid BODIPY-ceramide and immunocytochemistry using several specific markers (β-COP, giantin, and TGN38). In germinal vesicle oocytes the Golgi consisted of a series of structures, possibly cisternal stacks, dispersed in the ooplasm, but slightly more concentrated in the interior than at the cortex. A similar pattern was detected in rhesus monkey germinal vesicle oocytes. These “mini-Golgis” were functionally active because they were reversibly disrupted by the membrane trafficking inhibitor brefeldin A. However, the drug had no visible effect if the oocytes had been previously microinjected with GTP-γ-S. During in vitro maturation the large Golgi apparatus structures fragmented at germinal vesicle breakdown, and dispersed homogenously throughout the ooplasm, remaining in a fragmented state in metaphase-II oocytes. Similarly to what has been reported using protein synthesis inhibitors, the presence of brefeldin A blocked maturation at the germinal vesicle breakdown stage before the assembly of the metaphase-I spindle. These results suggest that progression of murine oocyte maturation may require functional membrane trafficking.
Evidence suggests that estrogen modulates growth hormone (GH) release and that GH plays an important role in follicular and ovulatory processes. How estradiol affects GH secretion is unclear. Having verified that there is a coincident surge of GH at the time of the preovulatory LH surge, immunocytochemical studies incorporating high-temperature antigen retrieval were used to determine whether GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) neurons, somatotropes, or both, expressed estrogen receptor α (ER), in the ewe. Although GHRH neurons were surrounded by many ER cells, they did not express immunocytochemically detectable ERs. In contrast to gonadotropes, in which the majority expressed ERs, few somatotropes were estrogen receptive. These data suggest that estrogen does not act directly on GHRH neurons to influence GH secretion, and any direct effect on pituitary GH release, through the ERα, may be small.
Meiotic maturation of mammalian oocytes (transition from prophase I to metaphase II) is accompanied by complex changes in the protein phosphorylation pattern. At least two major protein kinases are involved in these events; namely, cdc2 kinase and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase, because the inhibition of these kinases arrest mammalian oocytes in the germinal vesicle (GV) stage. We show that during meiotic maturation of bovine oocytes, the translation initiation factor, eIF4E (the cap binding protein), gradually becomes phosphorylated. This substantial phosphorylation begins at the time of germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) and continues to the metaphase II stage. The onset of eIF4E phosphorylation occurs in parallel with a significant increase in overall protein synthesis. However, although eIF4E is nearly fully phosphorylated in metaphase II oocytes, protein synthesis reaches only basal levels at this stage, similar to that of prophase I oocytes, in which the factor remains unphosphorylated. We present evidence that a specific repressor of eIF4E, the binding protein 4E-BP1, is present and could be involved in preventing eIF4E function in metaphase II stage oocytes. Recently, two protein kinases, called Mnk1 and Mnk2, have been identified in somatic cells as eIF4E kinases, both of which are substrates of MAP kinase in vivo. In bovine oocytes, a specific inhibitor of cdk kinases, butyrolactone I, arrests oocytes in GV stage and prevents activation of both cdc2 and MAP kinase. Under these conditions, the phosphorylation of eIF4E is also blocked, and its function in initiation of translation is impaired. In contrast, PD 098059, a specific inhibitor of the MAP kinase activation pathway, which inhibits the MAP kinase kinase, called MEK function, leads only to a postponed GVBD, and a delay in MAP kinase and eIF4E phosphorylation. These results indicate that in bovine oocytes, 1) MAP kinase activation is only partially dependent on MEK kinase, 2) MAP kinase is involved in eIF4E phosphorylation, and 3) the abundance of fully phosphorylated eIF4E does not necessarily directly stimulate protein synthesis. A possible MEK kinase-independent pathway of MAP kinase phosphorylation and the role of 4E-BP1 in repressing translation in metaphase II oocytes are discussed.
Somatic cell nuclear transfer was used to produce live piglets from cultured fetal fibroblast cells. This was achieved by exposing donor cell nuclei to oocyte cytoplasm for approximately 3 h before activation by chemical means. Initially, an experiment was performed to optimize a cell fusion system that prevented concurrent activation in the majority of recipient cytoplasts. Cultured fibroblast cells were fused in medium with or without calcium into enucleated oocytes flushed from superovulated gilts. Cybrids fused in the presence of calcium cleaved at a significantly (P < 0.05) greater rate (69%, 37 out of 54) after 2 days of culture compared with those fused without calcium (10%, 7 out of 73), suggesting that calcium-free conditions are needed to avoid activation in the majority of recipient cytoplasts during fusion. In the second experiment, cybrids fused in calcium-free medium were activated approximately 3 h later with ionomycin, followed by incubation in 6-dimethylaminopurine to determine development in vitro. Following 2 days of culture, cleavage rates of chemically activated and unactivated cybrids (fusion without activation control) were 93% (100 out of 108) and 7% (2 out of 27), respectively. After an additional 5 days of culture, activated cloned embryos formed blastocysts at a rate of 23% (25 out of 108) with an average inner cell mass and trophectoderm cell number of 10 (range, 3 to 38) and 31 (range, 16 to 58), respectively. In the third experiment, activated nuclear transfer embryos were transferred to the uteri of synchronized recipients after 3 days of culture to assess their development in vivo. Of 10 recipients receiving an average of 80 cleaved embryos (range, 40 to 107), 5 became pregnant (50%) as determined by ultrasound between Day 25 and Day 35 of gestation. Of the five pregnant recipients, two subsequently farrowed one piglet per litter originating from two different cell culture lines. In this study, efficient reprogramming of porcine donor nuclei by fusing cells in the absence of calcium followed by chemical activation of recipient cytoplasts was reflected in high rates of development to blastocyst and pregnancy initiation leading to full term development.
This study investigated the basic conditions required for the production of horse embryos by the transfer of the nuclei of fetal and adult fibroblast cells to enucleated oocytes. Cumulus-oocyte complexes were recovered from abattoir ovaries and matured in vitro in groups of 20–30 for 28–30 h in tissue culture medium 199 containing 20% v:v fetal bovine serum in coculture with equine oviduct epithelial cells. Fetal fibroblast cells (FFC) were derived from a 32-day-old Thoroughbred × Pony fetus, and adult skin fibroblast cells (SFC) were obtained from subdermal biopsies recovered from a 4-yr-old female Pony. The rates of fusion between the recipient cytoplasm with either FFC or SFC were significantly greater when the cells were treated with a combination of direct current (DC) pulses and Sendai virus rather than with DC pulses alone (81%–82% vs. 49%–57%, P < 0.05). There were no differences in the rates of nuclear reprogramming between FFC and SFC (88% vs. 84%), but the rate of cleavage of the resulting embryos to the 2-cell stage was higher when FFC were used (53%) than when SFC were used (35%). Blastocysts were obtained from oocytes reconstructed with both types of donor cells and after culture in vitro for 6–7 days, but the overall proportion of blastocysts produced was very low in both cases (FFC, 4%; SFC, 7%). These results demonstrate a very limited potential for in vitro development of horse embryos after nuclear reprogramming following the transfer of nuclei from either fetal or adult fibroblasts into recipient enucleated oocytes.
To determine if the development of the somatotropic axis in somatic clones (clones) is similar to that in heifers produced by artificial insemination (controls), serum samples were collected every 30 min for 6 h, once per month, for 7 mo from 4 clones generated from a 13-yr-old cow and from 4 age-matched controls. Average concentrations of growth hormone (GH) were not different between clones and controls, and GH concentrations declined over time in controls. Average concentrations of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) were less in clones than controls, and IGF-I concentrations increased over time in both groups. Concentrations of IGF-binding protein 3 (IGFBP-3) were greater in controls than in clones and did not change over time. Average IGFBP-2 concentrations did not change over time and were not different between clones and controls. Clones and controls were challenged with GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) (3 μg/100 kg body weight) and somatostatin (somatotropin release-inhibiting factor [SRIF]) (1.87 and 5 μg/100 kg body weight) at 14 mo of age. GHRH-induced GH secretion was greater and SRIF inhibition of GHRH-induced GH was less in clones than in controls. We speculate that some of the differences between clones and controls in concentrations of GH, IGF-I, and IGFBP-3 may be related to the genetic merit of the animals. Although there were differences in concentrations of components of the somatotropic axis between these clones and their age-matched controls, the values recorded were all within the range reported for calves of similar ages.
Two distinct cDNAs encoding β subunits of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) were cloned from the cDNA library constructed for the pituitary of the red-bellied newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, and sequenced. The newt FSHβ and LHβ cDNAs encode polypeptides of 129 and 131 amino acids, including signal peptides of 20 and 19 amino acids, respectively. The number and position of cysteine and N-glycosylation in each of the β subunits of FSH and LH, which are considered essential for assembly of the α subunit, are well conserved between the newt and other tetrapods. The high homology (41.6%) between the β subunits of newt FSH and LH imply less specificity of FSH and LH in gonadal function. One cDNA encoding the common polypeptide chain α subunit of FSH and LH was also isolated from the newt pituitary gland. The mRNAs of FSHβ, LHβ, and the α subunit were expressed only in the pituitary gland among various newt tissues. Double-staining with in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry revealed coexpression of FSHβ and LHβ in the same newt pituitary cells. Ovariectomy induced a significant increase in FSHβ mRNA levels, but there was no significant change in LHβ or α subunit mRNA levels compared with those in control animals. Taken together, these data suggest that two kinds of gonadotropins, namely FSH and LH, are expressed in the same gonadotropin-producing cells in the pars distalis of the newt as well as in other tetrapods and that the expression of FSHβ is negatively regulated by the ovaries.
Both LH and FSH play a central role in controlling ovarian function in mammals. However, little is known about the type of ovarian cells that are responsive to LH and FSH in marsupials. We determined, using in situ hybridization, the localization of mRNA encoding the receptors (R) for LH and FSH in ovaries of brushtail possums. The mRNA encoding FSH-R was observed in granulosa cells of healthy follicles containing at least two complete layers of cells. The mRNA encoding LH-R was first observed in granulosa cells at the time of antrum formation. Cells of the theca interna expressed LH-R mRNA but not FSH-R mRNA. Neither FSH-R nor LH-R mRNA was detected in atretic follicles. Both FSH-R and LH-R mRNAs were observed in luteal tissue, but only LH-R mRNA was observed in interstitial cells. Granulosa cells from follicles of various sizes (0.5 to >2 mm in diameter) responded to LH and FSH treatment with an increase in cAMP synthesis. In contrast, luteal tissue did not respond to either FSH or LH treatment. In conclusion, expression of FSH-R in the brushtail possum ovary was similar to that observed in many eutherian mammals. However, active LH-R was expressed in granulosa cells much earlier in follicular development than has been previously observed. In addition, although mRNAs for both FSH-R and LH-R were observed, neither FSH nor LH treatment stimulated cAMP synthesis in luteal tissue.
A sperm-agglutinating factor was purified from ovulated carp eggs and the conditioned medium (CM) of cortical-reacted eggs. It was identified to be the carp ovarian cystatin. Three cystatin isoforms were found. The cystatin isolated from the CM had a higher sperm-agglutinating activity than that isolated from eggs, although the cystatins have identical N-terminal amino acid sequences, masses, and positive charges. Differences in sperm-agglutinating activity between the cystatins of the CM and eggs may be caused by the different conformations because they differed in circular dichroism spectrum and tryptic map. Cystatin was discharged from cortical granules to the perivitelline space after fertilization and is abundant in the perivitelline fluid (PVF) of early stage embryos. Cystatin rapidly agglutinated spermatozoa via an electrostatic interaction. Other basic proteins also agglutinated carp spermatozoa. Their activities were inhibited by salt and high pH. Cystatin bound to the entire surface of carp spermatozoa. The PVF of early embryos agglutinated carp spermatozoa. The activity was related to the cystatin content and influenced by ionic strength and pH. Therefore, cystatin is the major sperm-agglutinating factor of PVF. Owing to the rapid action of cystatin on spermatozoa agglutination and the presence of a high concentration of cystatin in PVF, cystatin is considered important for preventing polyspermy in carp eggs.
Msj-1 (mouse sperm cell-specific DnaJ first homologue) is a gene specifically expressed in germ cells at haploid stages. The protein first appears in round spermatids, accumulates in the periacrosomal region of elongating spermatids, and is maintained in spermatozoa. The msj-1 expression pattern is consistent with a role for this DnaJ protein in the spermiogenesis process. In this study, we used two experimental models, the anuran amphibian Rana esculenta and the wobbler mutant mouse, to explore the role of MSJ-1 during spermatogenesis, with a focus on spermiogenesis. Mice homozygous for the recessive mutation wobbler (wr/wr), a mutation of unknown identity, produce sperm cells characterized by a missing acrosome. In Rana esculenta testis, detection of high levels of MSJ-1 protein coincided with the appearance of postmeiotic germ cells during the annual sexual cycle. Conversely, elimination of the meiotic and postmeiotic stages, through gonadotropin administration at low temperature, abolished the MSJ-1 immunoreactive signal. In 20-day-old mice, when postmeiotic germ cells appeared for the first time, MSJ-1 mRNA and protein were observed in / testis but were barely detectable in wr/wr testis. In adult testis, reduced MSJ-1 protein levels were observed in both /wr and wr/wr testis, as compared with / controls. Similarly, numbers of spermatids that stained by immunofluorescence for MSJ-1 appeared to be progressively reduced in adult / , /wr, and wr/wr mouse testes, respectively. Characterization of the endocrine status of wobbler testis revealed reduced transcript levels of estrogen receptor α and reduced intratesticular androgen levels. However, androgen treatment did not affect MSJ-1 protein levels in either frogs or mice. In conclusion, our data in Rana esculenta and the wobbler mouse demonstrate a tight correlation between MSJ-1 protein expression and postmeiotic stages. In particular, the findings in the wobbler testis suggest a role for this protein in acrosomogenesis.
Leydig cells develop inappropriately in animals lacking testicular macrophages. We have recently found that macrophages from adult animals produce 25-hydroxycholesterol, an oxysterol involved in the differentiation of hepatocytes and keratinocytes. Therefore, we hypothesized that testicular macrophages also produce 25-hydroxycholesterol during the early postnatal period and that this oxysterol plays a role in the differentiation of Leydig cells. We assessed the production of 25-hydroxycholesterol and 25-hydroxylase mRNA by cultured testicular macrophages from rats at 10, 20, and 40 days of age. We also tested the long-term effects of 25-hydroxycholesterol on basal and LH-stimulated testosterone production, and 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity as end points of Leydig cell differentiation in vitro. We found that testicular macrophages from animals at all ages produced both 25-hydroxycholesterol and 25-hydroxylase mRNA, with macrophages from 10-day-old animals having the highest steady-state levels of message. We also found that chronic exposure of Leydig cells to 25-hydroxycholesterol increased basal production of testosterone but decreased LH-stimulated steroidogenesis at all ages. Finally, 25-hydroxycholesterol increased 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity in both progenitor and immature Leydig cells. These findings support the hypothesis that testicular macrophages play an important role in the differentiation of Leydig cells through the secretion of 25-hydroxycholesterol.
Oocytes enucleated at the second metaphase stage (MII) are often used as recipient cytoplasts for nuclear transfer. The oocyte's nuclear material has been traditionally removed blindly by aspirating the first polar body (Pb1) along with a portion of the cytoplasm. However, the Pb1-guided enucleation method is unreliable because the position of the Pb1 is variable. A previous study showed that pretreatment of mouse oocytes with 3% (0.09 M) sucrose allowed visualization of the metaphase spindle and chromosomes under standard light microscopy and led to a 100% enucleation rate. The same sucrose treatment, however, did not produce the same effect in bovine oocytes. In this study, we increased the concentration of sucrose to 0.3–0.9 M in PBS containing 20% fetal bovine serum (SPF) and found that the majority of the treated bovine oocytes (75%–86%) formed a small transparent bud into the perivitelline space, as compared with the 0.1 M sucrose (6%) or the no sucrose (0%) control groups. Staining of DNA with Hoechst 33342 revealed that these projections coincided with the position of the metaphase chromosomes in 100% of sucrose-treated oocytes, whereas only 31% of oocytes showed alignment of the position of Pb1 with their nuclear materials. Furthermore, 95% of oocytes treated in 0.3 M SPF were successfully enucleated by removing a small amount of cytoplasm adjacent to the projection. This is a significantly higher enucleation rate than that obtained by conventional Pb1-guided enucleation, even when a larger amount of cytoplasm was removed. For nuclear transfer, the enucleated oocytes treated with sucrose did not differ from the control oocytes in rates of fusion, cleavage, or development to blastocysts, or in the average cell numbers in blastocysts. This study demonstrated that 0.3 M sucrose treatment of bovine oocytes facilitates the localization of metaphase chromosomes under normal light microscopy and hence increases enucleation efficiency without compromising the in vitro development potential of cloned embryos by nuclear transfer.
Prothrombin, once converted to its enzymatically active form (i.e., thrombin), induces a broad spectrum of cellular responses in both vascular and avascular tissues. Bovine ovarian granulosa cells isolated from healthy follicles of various sizes contain both prothrombin mRNA and immunologically reactive prothrombin that appears to be identical to prothrombin in follicular fluid and plasma. When tissue factor, the primary physiological activator of thrombin generation in plasma, is used to initiate thrombin formation, the profile of prothrombin-to-thrombin conversion is similar in follicular fluid and plasma. The conclusion that biologically functional prothrombin is synthesized by granulosa cells is further supported by evidence that mRNA for γ-glutamyl carboxylase, an enzyme essential for the vitamin K-dependent posttranslational modification of prothrombin, is expressed in granulosa cells in a manner similar to prothrombin mRNA. Thrombin's biological effects are mediated through selective proteolytic cleavage and activation of specific receptors. Bovine granulosa cells possess thrombin receptor (PAR-1) mRNA, and as seen with prothrombin mRNA and γ-glutamyl carboxylase mRNA, cells isolated from small follicles possess more PAR-1 mRNA than cells from large follicles. Thrombin receptor expression by cells in close proximity to an active thrombin-generating system suggests that these factors may be important mediators of cellular function in the ovarian follicle.
We tested the possibility of using LH and thyroxine (T4) to restore the testicular steroidogenic ability in aged Brown Norway rats. Three-, 6-, 12- (n = 8 per group), and 18-mo-old (n = 32; 3M, 6M, 12M, and 18M, respectively) rats were used. The 18M rats were divided into four groups (n = 8 per group) and implanted subdermally with Alzet mini-osmotic pumps containing saline (control), LH (24 μg/day), T4 (5 μg/day), and LH T4 (24 5 μg/day), respectively, for 4 wk (to 19 mo [19M] of age). Testis volume and absolute volumes of many testicular components were unchanged with advancing age and treatments, except for the blood vessels (occasional thickening), lymphatic space (increased), and Leydig cells (decreased with age but increased to the 3M level with LH and to the 12M level with both T4 and LH T4, respectively). The number of Leydig and connective tissue cells per testis was unchanged with aging and treatments. The number of macrophages was significantly higher in treated rats. The average volume of a Leydig cell was significantly decreased in 12M and 19M control rats. However, LH and LH T4 restored it to the 3M level, and T4 restored to the 12M level. The steroidogenic ability of Leydig cells in vitro decreased when aging from the 3M to the 19M level, LH and T4 enhanced it to the 12M level, and LH T4 raised it to the 3M level. Serum LH was unchanged from 3M to 12M rats, significantly reduced in 19M control rats, and raised above the 3M values with both LH and LH T4 treatment and above the 19M (control) values with T4 treatment; the latter values were lower than the 3M level. Serum T4 and tri-iodothyronine (T3) were highest in 3M and 6M rats and declined in 12M and 19M control rats; the latter group had the lowest levels. In all treated groups, T4 and T3 levels were significantly above those of 19M control rats but were lower than those of 3M through 12M rats. Serum testosterone was unchanged from 3M to 12M rats but was reduced in 19M control rats. Both LH and T4 significantly raised these values above the 19M control levels, but they were still lower than the 3M through 12M levels. Additionally, LH T4 significantly raised the serum testosterone levels to those of 12M rats, but these values were significantly lower than those of 3M and 6M rats. These findings show that with 24 5-μg dose of LH T4 per day for 4 wk, a 100% recovery of the average volume of a Leydig cell and its steroidogenic ability in vitro and a 73% and 300% restoration of serum testosterone levels compared to 3M and 19M control rats, respectively, could be achieved in aged Brown Norway rats. A 100% reversibility (compared to 3M rats) in serum testosterone levels appears to be possible with adjustments in the LH and T4 doses in the LH T4 treatment.
Production of genetically identical nonhuman primates would reduce the number of animals required for biomedical research and dramatically impact studies pertaining to immune system function, such as development of the human-immunodeficiency-virus vaccine. Our long-term goal is to develop robust somatic cell cloning and/or twinning protocols in the rhesus macaque. The objective of this study was to determine the developmental competence of nuclear transfer (NT) embryos derived from embryonic blastomeres (embryonic cell NT) or fetal fibroblasts (somatic cell NT) as a first step in the production of rhesus monkeys by somatic cell cloning. Development of cleaved embryos up to the 8-cell stage was similar among embryonic and somatic cell NT embryos and comparable to controls created by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI; mean ± SEM, 81 ± 5%, 88 ± 7%, and 87 ± 4%, respectively). However, significantly lower rates of development to the blastocyst stage were observed with somatic cell NT embryos (1%) in contrast to embryonic cell NT (34 ± 15%) or ICSI control embryos (46 ± 6%). Development of somatic cell NT embryos was not markedly affected by donor cell treatment, timing of activation, or chemical activation protocol. Transfer of embryonic, but not of somatic cell NT embryos, into recipients resulted in term pregnancy. Future efforts will focus on optimizing the production of somatic cell NT embryos that develop in high efficiency to the blastocyst stage in vitro.
Spermatogenesis is a complex process in which spermatogonial stem cells divide and subsequently differentiate into spermatozoa. This process requires spermatogonial stem cells to self-renew and provide a continual population of cells for differentiation. Studies on spermatogonial stem cells have been limited due to a lack of unique markers and an inability to detect the presence of these cells. The technique of germ cell transplantation provides a functional assay to identify spermatogonial stem cells in a cell population. We hypothesized that vitamin A-deficient (VAD) and hyperthermically treated testes would provide an enriched in vivo source of spermatogonial stem cells. The first model, hyperthermic treatment, depends on the sensitivity of maturing germ cells to high temperatures. Testes of adult mice were exposed to 43°C for 15 min to eliminate the majority of differentiating germ cells. Treated donor testes were 50% of normal adult testis size and, when transplanted into recipients, resulted in a 5.3- and 19-fold (colonies and area, respectively) increase in colonization efficiency compared to controls. The second model, VAD animals, also lacked differentiating germ cells, and testes weights were 25% of control values. Colonization efficiency of germ cells from VAD testes resulted in a 2.5- and 6.2-fold (colonies and area, respectively) increase in colonization compared to controls. Hyperthermically treated mice represent an enriched source of spermatogonial stem cells. In contrast, the low extent of colonization with germ cells from VAD animals raises important questions regarding the competency of stem cells from this model.
The ferret represents an attractive species for animal modeling of lung diseases because of the similarity between ferret and human lung biology and its relatively small size and short gestation time. In an effort to establish experimental protocols necessary for cloning ferrets, optimized conditions for in vitro maturation and artificial activation of ferret oocytes were examined. Cumulus-oocyte complexes were harvested from ovaries of superovulated ferrets, and in vitro maturation was evaluated in three different culture media: medium 1 (TCM-199 10% FBS), medium 2 (TCM-199 10% FBS with eCG [10 IU/ml] and hCG [5 IU/ml]), or medium 3 (TCM-199 10% FBS with eCG, hCG, and 17beta-estradiol [2 μg/ml]). After 24 h of maturation in vitro, the maturation rate of oocytes cultured in medium 2 (70%, n = 79) was significantly greater (P < 0.01) than those of oocytes cultured in the other two media (27%–36%, n = 67–73). At 48 h, similar maturation rates (56%–69%, n = 76–87) were observed for all three types of media. For activation experiments, oocytes cultured in medium 2 were stimulated with electrical and chemical stimuli either individually or in combination. Treatment with cycloheximide and 6-dimethylaminopurine (6-DMAP) following electrical stimulation resulted in 43% (n = 58) of the oocytes developing to the blastocyst stage. Such an activation rate represented a significant improvement over those obtainable under other tested conditions, including individual treatment with electrical pulses (10%, n = 41), cycloheximide (3%, n = 58), or 6-DMAP (5%, n = 59). Blastocysts derived from in vitro activation appeared to be normal morphologically and were composed of an appropriate number of both inner cell mass (mean ± SEM, 10.3 ± 1.1; n = 11) and trophectoderm (60.8 ± 2.9, n = 11) cells. These results have begun to elucidate parameters important for animal modeling and cloning with ferrets.
Increased matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) expression and activities help to mediate tissue involution through increasing extracellular matrix remodeling and promoting dedifferentiation and, ultimately, apoptosis. Therefore, we hypothesized that prostaglandin (PG) F2α administration would decrease expression of the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase (TIMP)-1, -2, and -3 and effectively increase the MMP:TIMP ratio, leading to glandular involution. In experiment 1, we tested the effects of PGF2α administration (Day 10 postestrus; Day 0 = estrus) on luteal TIMP-1, -2, and -3 mRNA and protein expression. Corpora lutea were collected at 0, 15, or 30 min or at 1, 2, 4, 6, 12, 24, and 48 h following PGF2α administration (n = 3–9 animals/time point). Following PGF2α administration, TIMP-1 mRNA levels decreased (P < 0.05) at 1 and 2 h relative to 0 h (controls), then increased to levels greater than controls at 4 and 6 h. In contrast, TIMP-2 and -3 mRNA levels did not decrease following PGF2α administration. The TIMP-1, -2, and -3 proteins were localized to large luteal cells (LLCs) within control (untreated) tissues. However, histodepletion of TIMP-1 within LLCs was evident within 30 min (earliest time point collected) following PGF2α injection and continued through 48 h. Luteal concentration of TIMP-1, as determined by RIA, was decreased (P < 0.05) by 15 min (earliest time point collected) following PGF2α administration and remained low through 48 h. In contrast, TIMP-2 and -3 immunolocalization was not altered by PGF2α administration. Experiment 2 was conducted to determine if PGF2α could initiate the preceding changes in TIMP-1 in early (Day 3) corpora lutea that can bind PGF2α but are refractory to its luteolytic effects. Serum concentrations of progesterone and luteal concentrations of TIMP-1 mRNA and protein were similar at 0 and 6 h after PGF2α injection on Day 3 postestrus. These data suggest that an early and sustained effect of PGF2α is the specific depletion of TIMP-1 within LLCs that are capable of responding to the luteolytic action of PGF2α. This action may increase the MMP:TIMP-1 ratio, creating an environment that favors extracellular matrix degradation and, thereby, facilitates both functional and structural regression.
The objective of the present study was to determine to what extent activin participates in setting the level of FSH secretion and if this regulation includes mediation via changes in GnRH secretion. We administered follistatin, the high-affinity binding protein for activin, to five ovariectomized sheep; we reasoned that the resultant binding of follistatin to activin should lower activin bioavailability and FSH secretion. Hypophyseal portal and peripheral blood samples were collected simultaneously at 10-min intervals for 18 h to measure GnRH, LH, FSH, and both activin-free and total follistatin. Six hours into collection, each ewe received 150 μg/kg i.v. of recombinant human follistatin-288. A week later, the same ewes were subjected to a second series of blood collections of similar length (time control). The FSH levels in pituitary portal blood were approximately 8-fold higher than those in the peripheral circulation. The FSH secretory patterns changed minimally during the time-control period. In contrast, follistatin had profound suppressive effects on FSH secretion. Maximal FSH suppression after FS-288 administration occurred at 5–6 h in the pituitary portal (65% suppression) and 9–10 h in the peripheral (48% suppression) circulation. Follistatin had no effect on GnRH or LH secretory patterns. Disappearance of total follistatin (i.e., free follistatin plus activin-bound follistatin) from the circulation was slower (P < 0.05) than that of free follistatin alone, suggesting that some of the follistatin was complexed with circulating activin, thus reducing the bioavailability of activin. The slower clearance of total follistatin and the lack of follistatin effects on GnRH secretion suggest that changes in activin bioavailability dictate the level of pituitary FSH secretion and that this is a pituitary-specific effect.
Gap junctional intercellular coupling allows cells to share low molecular weight metabolites and second messengers, thus facilitating homeostatic and developmental processes. Gap junctions make their appearance very early in rodent development, during compaction in the eight-cell stage. Surprisingly, preimplantation mouse embryos lacking the gap junction protein connexin 43 develop normally and establish full-term pregnancies despite severely reduced gap junctional coupling. It was suggested that this might be explained by the presence of at least five additional connexins known to be expressed in blastocysts. In the present study, we set out to clarify the number of connexins present in preimplantation rodent embryos and the role of gap junctional coupling, if any, in blastocyst development. We provide evidence from reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis that the genes encoding 3 additional connexins (connexin 30 or β6, connexin 36 or α9, and connexin 57 or α10) are also transcribed in preimplantation mouse embryos. Furthermore, we show that multiple connexins are expressed in rat preimplantation embryos, indicating that multiplicity of connexin expression may be a common feature of early mammalian embryogenesis. We could detect no up-regulation of any of 3 coexpressed connexins examined in mouse embryos lacking connexin 43. Impaired intercellular coupling caused either by the loss of connexin 43 or by treatment of cultured embryos with the gap junctional coupling blocker 18α-glycyrrhetinic acid (AGA) had no discernable effect on either apoptosis or glucose utilization, parameters known to be affected by gap junctional coupling in other contexts. These results, taken together with the reported inability of AGA to perturb blastocyst formation, imply that gap junctional coupling is not essential during this developmental period. We propose that connexin expression and the assembly of multiple types of gap junction channels in preimplantation embryos facilitates the diversification of communication pathways that will appear during postimplantation development. New evidence of this diversification is presented using rat blastocyst outgrowths.
This study examined the effect of the preovulatory gonadotropin surge on the temporal and spatial regulation of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA), and uPA receptor (uPAR) mRNA expression and tPA, uPA, and plasmin activity in bovine preovulatory follicles and new corpora lutea collected at approximately 0, 6, 12, 18, 24, and 48 h after a GnRH-induced gonadotropin surge. Messenger RNAs for tPA, uPA, and uPAR were increased in a temporally specific fashion within 24 h of the gonadotropin surge. Localization of tPA mRNA was primarily to the granulosal layer, whereas both uPA and uPAR mRNAs were detected in both the granulosal and thecal layers and adjacent ovarian stroma. Activity for tPA was increased in follicular fluid and the preovulatory follicle apex and base within 12 h after the gonadotropin surge. The increase in tPA activity in the follicle base was transient, whereas the increased activity in the apex was maintained through the 24 h time point. Activity for uPA increased in the follicle apex and base within 12 h of the gonadotropin surge and remained elevated. Plasmin activity in follicular fluid also increased within 12 h after the preovulatory gonadotropin surge and was greatest at 24 h. Our results indicate that mRNA expression and enzyme activity for both tPA and uPA are increased in a temporally and spatially specific manner in bovine preovulatory follicles after exposure to a gonadotropin surge. Increased plasminogen activator and plasmin activity may be a contributing factor in the mechanisms of follicular rupture in cattle.
To study the mechanism of male germ cell differentiation, testicular germ cells carrying green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a transgene marker were transplanted into infertile mouse testis. Fluorescence-positive seminiferous tubule segments colonized with GFP-labeled donor germ cells were isolated and measured, and differentiated germ cells were analyzed in living squashed preparations. Cell associations in normal stages of the seminiferous epithelial cycle were also studied and used as a reference. Two months after transplantation, the average length of the colonies was 1.3 mm. The cell associations of transplanted colonies were consistent with those of normal stages of the cycle. However, stages of the cycle were not necessarily identical in different colonies. Three months after transplantation, the average length of transplanted colonies was 3.4 mm, and the cell association in every portion of a colony was similar to that of the corresponding stage of the cycle. Even in long fused colonies made by transplantation of a higher concentration of male germ cells, the cell association patterns in various regions of a single colony were similar and consistent with those of some of the normal stages of the cycle. Development of different stages inside the colony was observed by 6 mo after transplantation. These results indicate that the commencement of spermatogonial stem cell differentiation occurs randomly to develop different stages of the cycle in different colonies. Then, each colony shows one single stage of the cycle for a long time, even if it becomes a very large colony or fuses with other colonies. These observations indicate the existence of some kind of synchronization mechanism. By 6 mo, however, normal development of the stages of the cycle appeared in seminiferous tubules.
Appropriate integrin expression appears to be necessary for successful implantation of human embryos and varies considerably among species. The present study was undertaken to determine the distributions of integrin subunits α1, α3, and α6 as well as the extracellular matrix (ECM) components collagen IV and laminin in implanting bovine trophoblast and endometrium. Immunohistochemical staining of cryostat sections prepared from nonpregnant endometrium, of preattachment through to early villus development pregnant endometrium (Days 18, 21, 24, and 30), and of isolated trophoblast binucleate cells was performed. Trophoblast down-regulated the integrin α1 subunit as attachment proceeded, whereas reactivity scores for α6 antibody tended to increase from Day 18 through 24 and remained high. A subpopulation of trophoblast binucleate cells expressed the α3 integrin subunit. Uterine epithelium constitutively expressed α3 and α6 integrin subunits, but the α1 subunit was down-regulated as the luminal epithelium was modified. Collagen IV and laminin reactivity increased in the basal lamina and underlying subepithelial stroma as pregnancy proceeded. The results suggest that binucleate cell fusion with the maternal epithelium initiates integrin and ECM changes in the subepithelial stroma.
Osteopontin (OPN), a multifunctional phosphoprotein found in both hard and soft tissues, was examined in the male reproductive tract. The expression and regulation of OPN in the rat testis, efferent ducts, and epididymis was examined during postnatal development through to adulthood using immunocytochemistry at the light- and electron-microscopic level. Immunoblot analysis revealed a major 30-kDa band for epididymal tissue and a major 60-kDa band for the testis. In the testis, immunostaining of OPN was noted in early germ cells from spermatogonia to early pachytene spermatocytes, suggesting a role for OPN as an adhesive protein binding these cells to the basement membrane and adjacent Sertoli cells. Nonciliated cells of the efferent ducts expressed OPN, whereas a cell- and region-specific distribution of OPN was observed in the epididymis. Reactivity of OPN in the apical region of the cell corresponded to labeling of microvilli, small endocytic vesicles, and endosomes, where OPN may serve to remove calcium from the epididymal lumen and, thus, prevent mineral accumulation and subsequent decrease in sperm fertility. Regulation and postnatal studies revealed that circulating androgens regulate OPN expression in principal cells of the epididymis only. Taken together, the data reveal cell- and region-specific expression and regulation of OPN in the epididymis.
The nonhuman primate is a relevant model for human disease that can be used for diverse biomedical investigations. The ability to propagate a founder animal by application of assisted reproductive technologies is pressing, but an even greater need in many studies is access to genetically identical animals. In an effort to create genetically identical monkeys, we evaluated two approaches to monozygotic twinning; blastomere separation, and blastocyst bisection. Embryos were produced by intracytoplasmic sperm injection of oocytes recovered following controlled ovarian stimulation. The quality of demiembryos produced in these efforts was evaluated by quantitating the efficiency of creating identical pairs for embryo transfer, by morphological assessment, by the allocation of cells to the inner cell mass (ICM) and trophectoderm (TE) in the blastocyst, and by the outcome of embryo transfer to synchronized host animals. Pairs were produced in high yield (85%–95%) by both twinning methods. Demiembryos resulting from blastomere separations at the 2- or 4-cell stage grew to blastocysts at the control frequency. Demiblastocysts contained, on average, half the number of cells of the intact controls while maintaining the same ICM:TE or ICM:total cell ratio. The equivalency of demiblastocysts within a set was also evaluated by differential cell counting. Embryo transfers of identical sets led to a 33% clinical pregnancy rate, with two twin pregnancies initiated. Neither pregnancy resulted in term birth of monozygotic twins, but our results are sufficiently encouraging to justify a large-scale twinning trial in the rhesus macaque.
Apoptosis induced in male germ cells following ionizing radiation is dependent on functional p53 (Trp53) being present. We sought to determine whether Fas (Tnfrsf6/CD95/APO-1), an apoptotic factor, is involved in this p53-dependent germ cell death. In p53 knock-out mice exposed to 5 Gy of x-radiation, germ cells were protected from cell death, as assessed by counting apoptotic seminiferous tubules 12 h following radiation. Similarly, spermatid head counts in p53 knock-out mice remained near normal 29 days after exposure to 0.5 Gy of radiation, whereas wild-type animals had a more than twofold reduction in spermatid head counts. Fas mRNA expression remained at pretreatment levels in p53 knock-out mice; however, Fas increased in a time-dependent manner in wild-type mice following exposure to 5 Gy of radiation, indicating that radiation-induced Fas expression is p53-dependent. The functional significance of Fas involvement was demonstrated when lprcg mice, having a nonfunctional Fas receptor, were exposed to 5 Gy of radiation; the number of apoptotic seminiferous tubules 12 h following radiation was significantly reduced compared to that of wild-type mice. Additionally, lprcg mice exposed to 0.5 Gy of radiation had increased spermatid head counts 29 days following radiation compared to wild-type mice. Interestingly, gld mice with a non-functional Fas ligand (Tnfsf6/FasL/CD95L) were as sensitive to radiation as wild-type animals, and levels of FasL mRNA were not affected by radiation treatment. These results indicate that apoptosis and up-regulation of Fas following radiation are both p53-dependent events. Although Fas is necessary, in part, for radiation-induced p53-dependent apoptosis, FasL is not.
To elucidate the molecular mechanisms involved with spermiogenesis in testis, we performed differential display screening to isolate genes that are developmentally up-regulated during rat testis development. One of the cDNAs isolated by differential display was highly expressed in testis. Both reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and Northern blot analysis showed that the expression level of the gene developmentally increased. By screening the rat testis cDNA library, we successfully isolated rat cDNA clones encoding the entire open-reading frame of 462 base pairs coding a small protein of 154 amino acids. Because in situ hybridization revealed that the gene was specifically expressed in haploid spermatids in the rat seminiferous tubules, it was designated as spergen-1 (spermatogenic cell-specific gene-1). The recently opened database of the full-length mouse cDNA collection contains a mouse gene that is homologous to rat spergen-1. Subcellular fractionation followed by immunoblot analysis revealed that spergen-1 protein was associated with mitochondria. The transfection experiments performed in COS-7 cells suggested that spergen-1 has a N-terminal mitochondria-targeting signal. We suggest that spergen-1 might be involved in spermiogenesis by transiently associating with spermatid mitochondria.
The effect of pregnancy on postweaning mammary gland involution was investigated in mice. On the third day after forced weaning at Lactation Day 10, the apoptotic index was 56% lower in mammary tissue of mice that were pregnant at the time of weaning than in nonpregnant mice. Conversely, the bromodeoxyuridine-labeling index was increased sevenfold in pregnant mice compared to nonpregnant controls (3.5% vs. 0.5%, respectively). Structure of mammary alveoli was largely maintained in postweaning pregnant mice. The effect of pregnancy on three specific mammary epithelial cell survival pathways was also examined. First, pregnancy blocked the loss of Stat5a phosphorylation during involution. Significantly, loss of Stat5a phosphorylation during involution was not correlated with loss of Stat5a nuclear localization. Second, pregnancy maintained nuclear-localized progesterone receptor during lactation. Third, pregnancy was associated with increased expression of bfl-1 during involution but had little effect on the expression of other bcl-2 family members. The data indicate that pregnancy inhibits mammary cell apoptosis after weaning while permitting proliferation of the mammary epithelium, and they support the hypothesis that Stat5a and progesterone-signaling pathways act in concert to mediate this effect.
We have previously reported high survival in mouse sperm frozen at 21°C/min to −70°C in a solution containing 18% raffinose in 0.25× PBS (400 mOsm) and then warmed rapidly at approximately 2000°C/min, especially under lowered oxygen tensions induced by Oxyrase, a bacterial membrane preparation. The best survival rates were obtained in the absence of glycerol. The first concern of the present study was to determine the effects of the cooling rate on the survival of sperm suspended in this medium. The sperm were cooled to −70°C at rates ranging from 0.3 to 530°C/min. The survival curve was an inverted “U” shape, with the highest motility occurring between 27 and 130°C/min. Survival decreased precipitously at higher cooling rates. Decreasing the warming rate, however, decreased survivals at all cooling rates. The motility depression with slow warming was especially evident in sperm cooled at the optimal rates. This fact is consistent with our current view that the frozen medium surrounding sperm cells is in a metastable state, perhaps partly vitrified as a result of the high concentrations of sugar. The decimation of sperm cooled more rapidly than optimum (>130°C/min), even with rapid warming, is consistent with the induction of considerable quantities of intracellular ice at these rates. When glycerol was added to the above medium, motilities were also dependent on the cooling rate, but they tended to be substantially lower than those obtained in the absence of glycerol. The minimum temperature in the above experiments was −70°C. When sperm were frozen to −70°C at optimum rates, lowering the temperature to −196°C had no adverse effect.
Mouse spermatozoa in 18% raffinose and 3.8% Oxyrase in 0.25× PBS exhibit high motilities when frozen to −70°C at 20–130°C/min and then rapidly warmed. However, survival is <10% when they are frozen at 260 or 530°C/min, presumably because, at those high rates, intracellular water cannot leave rapidly enough to prevent extensive supercooling and this supercooling leads to nucleation and freezing in situ (intracellular ice formation [IIF]). The probability of IIF as a function of cooling rate can be computed by coupled differential equations that describe the extent of the loss of cell water during freezing and from knowledge of the temperature at which the supercooled protoplasm of the cell can nucleate. Calculation of the kinetics of dehydration requires values for the hydraulic conductivity (Lp) of the cell and for its activation energy (Ea). Using literature values for these parameters in mouse sperm, we calculated curves of water volume versus temperature for four cooling rates between 250 and 2000°C/min. The intracellular nucleation temperature was inferred to be −20°C or above based on the greatly reduced motilities of sperm that underwent rapid cooling to a minimum temperature of between −20 and −70°C. Combining that information regarding nucleation temperature with the computed dehydration curves leads to the conclusion that intracellular freezing should occur only in cells that are cooled at 2000°C/min and not in cells that are cooled at 250–1000°C/min. The calculated rate of 2000°C/min for IIF is approximately eightfold higher than the experimentally inferred value of 260°C/min. Possible reasons for the discrepancy are discussed.
Niche is believed to affect stem cell behavior. In self-renewing systems for which functional transplantation assays are available, it has long been assumed that stem cells are fixed in the niche and that ablative treatments to remove endogenous stem cells are required for successful donor engraftment. Our results demonstrate that enriched populations of donor stem cells can produce long-lasting spermatogenic colonies in testes of immature and mature, nonablated mice, albeit at a lower frequency than in ablated mice. Colonization of nonablated recipient testes by neonate, pup, and cryptorchid adult donor spermatogonial stem cells demonstrates that competition for niche begins soon after birth and that endogenous stem cells influence the degree and pattern of donor cell colonization. Thus, a dynamic relationship between stem cell and niche exists in the testis, as has been suggested for hematopoiesis. Therefore, similar competitive properties of donor stem cells may be characteristic of all self-renewing systems.
17α,20β-Dihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one is the major oocyte maturation-inducing hormone of several teleost species. Gonadotropin-induced increase in ovarian 20β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity is essential for the synthesis of maturation-inducing hormone. Cloning and expression studies suggest that ayu (Plecoglossus altivelis) ovarian carbonyl reductase can function as 20β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. The amino acid sequence deduced from the isolated cDNA had 276 amino acid residues and shared approximately 60% homology with mammalian and teleostean carbonyl reductases. The sequence data search showed that the ayu cDNA clone belongs to the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family. The clear lysate prepared from Escherichia coli harboring the cDNA catalyzed the production of maturation-inducing hormone. Its identification was confirmed by two-dimensional, thin-layer chromatography followed by recrystallization. Purification of the E. coli-expressed cDNA product revealed that it possessed both carbonyl reductase and steroid dehydrogenase activities, and 17α-hydroxyprogesterone, the endogenous immediate precursor of maturation-inducing hormone, was one of the preferred substrates. Furthermore, Northern blot analysis denoted that the transcripts are present both in fully grown, immature ovarian follicles and at higher levels in mature ovarian follicles. These results demonstrate that the carbonyl reductase of ayu ovary is involved in the production of maturation-inducing hormone, and they provide evidence for a novel physiological role of this enzyme in the final maturation of oocytes. Based on its functional properties, the enzyme can be referred to as carbonyl reductase-like 20β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase.
This study was designed to elucidate the molecular mechanism(s) mediating cyclooxygenase-2 (Cox-2) regulation during differentiation of the granulosa cell. The 5′ flanking sequence of the Cox-2 gene was linked to a vector with a luciferase reporter gene, and this vector was transfected into freshly isolated bovine granulosa cells or granulosa cells after culture with or without forskolin to induce luteinization in vitro. The Cox-2 promoter was inducible by 8-bromo cAMP but not by phorbol esters in fresh granulosa cells, and maximal expression by cAMP was delayed until 48 h after treatment. In contrast, after luteinization of granulosa cells by 8-day treatment with forskolin, the Cox-2 promoter was immediately inducible by phorbol esters but not by cAMP. In granulosa cells cultured for 8 days without forskolin, the Cox-2 promoter continued to be inducible only by cAMP and not by phorbol esters. Unexpectedly, no delay was observed in the induction of Cox-2 by cAMP in granulosa cells that were cultured without forskolin, compared with an ∼1 day delay in Cox-2 induction by cAMP in fresh granulosa cells. Myristoylated protein kinase (PK) A and PKC inhibitory peptides were utilized to further confirm the PKA- or PKC-dependence of Cox-2 induction. Time-course experiments showed that only 2 days of forskolin treatment could induce PKC-responsiveness of the Cox-2 promoter, although maximal responsiveness was not observed until 10 days of luteinization. Promoter activity was also analyzed in a series of deletion mutants as well as site-directed mutants of C/EBP, CRE, and E-box. A 282-base pair sequence in the Cox-2 5′ flanking region maintained full inducibility by PKA in granulosa cells and by PKC in luteinized granulosa cells. The E-box element was found to be the critical regulatory element for Cox-2 induction by either PKA in granulosa cells or by PKC in luteinized granulosa cells. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays were performed on nuclear extracts from fresh or luteinized granulosa cells. Upstream stimulatory factor (USF)-1 and USF-2 bound to the E-box of the Cox-2 gene, and binding was similar for nuclear extracts from fresh, cultured, or luteinized granulosa cells. Thus, although luteinization changes transcriptional regulation of Cox-2 from PKA- to PKC-dependence, the crucial role of the E-box element in this transcriptional activation is conserved.
Prostaglandin F2α (PGF2α) typically initiates a cascade of events that leads to the functional and structural demise of the corpus luteum. A sheep model was used in which a 1-h, systemic infusion of PGF2α (20 μg/min) is given at midcycle. Such an infusion mimics the onset of spontaneous luteolysis by causing a transient decrease in peripheral plasma progesterone, which reaches a nadir (∼60% of controls) at 8 h but returns to control levels by 16–24 h. We investigated whether PGF2α also influenced the endogenous protein levels of tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases, TIMP-1 and TIMP-2, and matrix metalloproteinases, MMP-2 and MMP-9, all of which have been implicated in remodeling of the extracellular matrix (ECM). Corpora lutea (Day 11) were collected at 0 h and at 1, 8, 16, and 24 h post-PGF2α infusion (n = 3 sheep at each time). Immunoblot analysis revealed an immediate and precipitous decline in TIMP-1 (30 kDa) and TIMP-2 (19 kDa) protein levels (60% and 90%, respectively; P < 0.05) at the 1-h time point and remained depressed at 8 h (P < 0.05). Gelatin zymography and other procedures identified three MMPs (85, 70, and 64 kDa), which were shown to be the latent form of MMP-9 and the active and latent forms of MMP-2, respectively. In contrast to the rapid decrease in TIMP-1 and -2 levels, an increase in MMP-2 activity (165% of controls, P < 0.05) occurred at 8 h, which corresponded to the nadir in plasma progesterone. These early changes in TIMPs and MMPs indicate that alterations in the structure of the ECM by PGF2α may play a hitherto unsuspected role in the subsequent process of functional luteolysis.
The dynamic nature of cellular interactions during differentiation of germ cells and their translocation from the basement membrane to the lumen of the seminiferous tubules requires the existence of complex and well-regulated cellular adhesion mechanisms in the testis. Successful migration of the developing germ cells is characterized by dynamic breakage and reformation of cadherin-containing adherens junctions between the germ cells and Sertoli cells, the polarized somatic cells of the testis that support and nourish the developing gametes. Here, we demonstrate the accumulation of abnormally swollen, actin-coated, endosome-like structures that contain intact adherens junctions and stain positive for N-cadherin and β-catenin in the Sertoli cell cytosol of mice deficient in Inpp5b, an inositol polyphosphate 5-phosphatase. Simultaneous to the formation of these abnormal structures, developing germ cells are prematurely released from the seminiferous epithelium and sloughed into the epididymis. Our results demonstrate a role for Inpp5b in the regulation of cell adhesion in the testis and in the formation of junctional complexes with neighboring cells, and they emphasize the important and essential role of phosphoinositides in spermatogenesis.
Structural and functional development of the corpus luteum (CL) involves tissue remodeling, angiogenesis, lipid metabolism, and steroid production. The peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) have been shown to play a role in these as well as in a multitude of other cellular processes. To examine the expression of mRNA corresponding to the PPAR family members (α, δ, and γ) in luteal tissue, ovaries were collected from gonadotropin-treated, immature rats on Days 1, 4, 8, and 14 of pseudopregnancy and from adult, cycling animals on each day of the estrous cycle. Ovaries were processed for in situ hybridization or RNA isolation for analysis by RNase protection assay. The expression of PPARγ mRNA was abundant in granulosa cells of developing follicles during both pseudopregnancy and the estrous cycle and was low to undetectable in CL from pseudopregnant rats. However, luteal tissue in cycling animals, especially CL remaining from previous cycles, had high levels of PPARγ mRNA. The PPARα mRNA was localized mainly in the theca and stroma, and PPARδ mRNA was expressed throughout the ovary. Levels of mRNA for PPARγ decreased between Days 1 and 4 of pseudopregnancy, and PPARα mRNA levels were lower on the day of estrus compared to pro- and metestrus (P < 0.05). The PPARδ mRNA levels remained steady throughout the estrous cycle and pseudopregnancy. These data illustrate a difference in the luteal expression of mRNA for PPARγ between the adult, cycling rat and the immature, gonadotropin-treated rat. This differential pattern of expression may be related to the difference in timing of the preovulatory prolactin surge, because the gonadotropin-primed animals would not experience a prolactin surge coincident with the LH surge, as occurs in adult, cycling animals. Additionally, the expression pattern of PPARδ mRNA indicates that it may be involved in cellular functions involved with maintaining basal ovarian function, whereas PPARα may play a role in lipid metabolism in the theca and stroma.
Androgens, in concert with lactogenic hormones, contribute to the maintenance of function of the corpus luteum (CL) in pregnant rats. Whereas some of the androgenic actions in the CL are clearly mediated by intracrine conversion to estrogen, pure androgenic effects are also implicated in the regulation of this transient endocrine gland. In this report, we have established, to our knowledge for the first time, the expression of androgen receptor (AR) mRNA and protein throughout gestation in the rat CL. We have found that the AR remains expressed in the CL of gestation on Day 4 postpartum and becomes expressed in the newly formed CL after postpartum ovulation. An AR immunoreactive protein was identified in the CL of pregnancy as well as in prostate and epididymis, which were used as positive controls. The luteal AR protein had mainly nuclear localization, yet some diffuse cytoplasmic staining was also observed. Moreover, we have established that androstenedione, the main circulating androgen in pregnant rats, significantly reduces the decline in luteal weight observed during postpartum structural regression. This effect was correlated with a decrease in the number of cells undergoing apoptosis and with enhanced levels of circulating progesterone. In addition, in vivo administration of androstenedione delayed the occurrence of DNA fragmentation in postpartum CL incubated in serum-free conditions. Finally, we have shown that the interference with apoptosis in vitro elicited by androstenedione is accompanied by an increased capacity of the CL to secrete progesterone. In summary, the results of this study have established that the rat CL expresses AR throughout pregnancy and after parturition, and they have defined a potential role for androstenedione in opposing postpartum luteal regression through inhibition of apoptosis and stimulation of progesterone production.
Leptin is a product of the ob gene that is produced primarily by adipose tissue. Leptin and its receptors are found within the ovary, but it is unclear what function this hormone has in the ovary. Using immunohistochemistry, we determined that leptin is found in most cell types in the murine ovary, with the highest staining levels observed in the oocyte. Leptin receptor was also expressed in all of the main ovarian cell types, with the thecal cell layer exhibiting the highest staining levels. Leptin administration did not affect spontaneous or induced maturation of either isolated denuded oocytes or cumulus-oocyte complexes, but it did significantly increase the rate of meiotic resumption in preovulatory follicle-enclosed oocytes (P < 0.01). Measurements of cAMP within oocytes cultured with leptin showed that this enhanced ability to resume meiosis does not occur via activation of phosphodiesterase 3B and subsequent cAMP reduction. These results provide evidence that leptin affects oocyte maturation when the oocyte is cultured within its normal follicular environment. It is suggested that leptin may induce the production of another factor, possibly from thecal cells, that directly or indirectly acts on the oocyte to initiate germinal vesicle breakdown in this species.
The present studies tested the hypotheses that short-term fasting would reduce leptin gene expression and circulating concentrations of leptin and insulin in mature, ovariectomized, estradiol-implanted cows and that intracerebroventricular infusions of recombinant ovine leptin (oleptin) would attenuate reductions in insulin concentration and stimulate LH secretion. Ovariectomized cows were assigned to either control (normal fed; n = 6) or fasted (60 h of fasting; n = 7) groups and infused with 200 μg recombinant oleptin three times at hourly intervals on Day 2 (n = 6 per group). Fasting decreased plasma concentrations of insulin (P < 0.01) and leptin (P < 0.04) but, as expected, did not reduce plasma concentrations of glucose or any LH secretion variable. Central infusion of leptin on Day 2 increased (P < 0.01) plasma concentrations of leptin in both control and fasted groups. Concomitantly, leptin treatment increased plasma insulin (P < 0.01) and LH (P < 0.03) concentrations in fasted but not in control cows. Increases in overall mean and baseline concentrations of LH after leptin treatment were the result of an augmentation of the size of LH pulses. The effects of fasting on leptin gene expression and the potential diurnal effects on circulating leptin were examined in a group of cows (n = 12) not treated with leptin. Fasting for 60 h reduced (P < 0.001) leptin gene expression by 30%, and no diurnal effects on circulating leptin were observed. These results indicate that although short-term fasting does not reduce the frequency or amplitude of LH pulses or the concentration of LH in mature cows, this nutritional perturbation clearly sensitizes both the hypothalamic-pituitary axis and endocrine pancreas to exogenous leptin, which in these experiments resulted in heightened secretion of both LH and insulin.
Evidence from epidemiologic, clinical, and experimental studies has shown that a suboptimal intrauterine environment during early pregnancy can alter fetal growth and gestation length and is associated with an increased prevalence of adult hypertension and cardiovascular disease. It has been postulated that maternal nutrient restriction may act to reprogram the development of the pituitary-adrenal axis, resulting in excess glucocorticoid exposure and adverse health outcomes in later life. It is unknown, however, whether maternal nutrient restriction during the periconceptional period alters the development of the fetal pituitary-adrenal axis or whether the effects of periconceptional undernutrition can be reversed by the provision of an adequate level of maternal nutrition throughout the remainder of pregnancy. We have investigated the effect of restricted periconceptional nutrition (70% of control feed allowance) from 60 days before until 7 days after mating and the effect of restricted gestational nutrition from Day 8 to 147 of gestation on the development of the fetal hypothalamo-pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis in the sheep. In these studies, we have also investigated the effects of fetal number and sex on the pituitary-adrenal responses to periconceptional and gestational undernutrition. In ewes maintained on a control diet throughout the periconceptional and gestational periods, fetal plasma ACTH concentrations were higher and the prepartum surge in cortisol occurred earlier in singletons compared with twins. Plasma ACTH concentrations were also significantly higher in male compared with female singletons, and in twin fetuses, the prepartum surge in cortisol concentrations occurred earlier in males than in females. Periconceptional undernutrition resulted in higher fetal plasma concentrations of ACTH between 110 and 145 days of gestation and a significantly greater cortisol response to a bolus dose of corticotropin-releasing hormone in twin, but not singleton, fetuses in late gestation. We have therefore demonstrated that fetal number and sex each has an impact on the timing of the prepartum activation of the HPA axis in the sheep. Restriction of the level of maternal nutrition before and in the first week of a twin pregnancy results in stimulation of the fetal pituitary-adrenal axis in late gestation, and this effect is not reversed by the provision of a maintenance control diet from the second week of pregnancy.
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