Expression and Tissue Specificity of an Abundant 32-kDa Protein Found in the Large Luteal Cell of the Pregnant Rat

Author(s):  
T. G. Parmer ◽  
M. P. McLean ◽  
S. Nelson ◽  
G. Gibori
Endocrinology ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 114 (2) ◽  
pp. 609-617 ◽  
Author(s):  
GEULA GIBORI ◽  
Y. -D. IDA CHEN ◽  
IQBAL KHAN ◽  
SALMAN AZHAR ◽  
G. M. REAVEN

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A766-A767
Author(s):  
Jennifer Jones ◽  
Saswati Banerjee ◽  
Winston E Thompson ◽  
Indrajit Chowdhury

Abstract The formation of a functional corpus luteum (CL) is an absolute requirement for reproductive success and is induced by the mid-cycle surge of luteinizing hormone (LH). The CL is a transient ovarian endocrine structure that maintains pregnancy in primate during the first trimester and in rodents during the entire pregnancy by producing steroid hormone progesterone (P4). CL growth and differentiation are tightly regulated by both survival and cell death signals, including endocrine (LH), intra-ovarian regulators, and cell-cell interactions. Neuregulin-1 (NRG1) is a member of the epidermal growth factor-like factor family that mediates it’s effect through the erythroblastoma (ErbB) family. However, the detailed mechanisms associated with the interplay of NRG1 and its receptors in CL function is not known. Therefore, we examined the role and action of NRG1 and its receptors in the gonadotropin signaling pathway that impacts CL functions. Immunocolocalization of NRG1 and ErbB2/3 in pregnant rat CL on day 14 and 21 suggest that both NRG1 and ErbB2/3 are differentially expressed in CL. Moreover, both NRG1 and ErbB2/3 are highly expressed in rat CL on day 14 compared to day 21. Furthermore, in vitro studies revealed that rat luteal cells (LCs) treated with exogenous tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα, an inflammatory cytokine) promoted apoptosis in LCs in a dose and time-dependent manner. However, the effects of TNFα was attenuated in presence of exogenous NRG1. Under these experimental conditions, immunoblot analysis indicated that exogenous TNFα treatment in the presence of NRG1 inhibits apoptosis through increased levels of the anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl2 and Bclxl, and activation of ErbB2-ErbB3-PI3K-Akt signaling pathway. Collectively, these studies provide new insights on the NRG1-mediated anti-apoptotic mechanism in LCs through ErbB3-ErbB2-PI3K-Akt→Bcl/Bcl-xL pathway and may have important clinical implications. Acknowledgements: This study was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants 1 SC1 GM130544-01A1, 1SC3GM113751 and G12RR03034. This research was conducted in a facility constructed with support from the Research Facilities Improvement Grant C06RR018386 from the National Institutes of Health National Center for Research Resources.


1981 ◽  
Vol 241 (6) ◽  
pp. E444-E448
Author(s):  
R. Sridaran ◽  
G. Gibori

A dihydrotestosterone (DHT) pellet (4 mg) inserted under each ovarian bursa on day 9 of pregnancy induced within 24 h, a 40% decline in serum progesterone (P) concentrations in rats; a further reduction was observed on days 12 and 15. Although P levels were significantly reduced by DHT treatment, fetuses remained alive on day 12. However, by day 15, complete abortion occurred in 75% of the rats, indicating that a decline in P secretion precedes abortion, To further determine whether the abortifacient action of DHT was due to its luteolytic effect, 20-cm DHT capsules were implanted subcutaneously in ovariectomized rats treated with 4 mg P and 0.5 micrograms of estradiol (E). Control rats were sham-operated and treated with empty capsules. DHT treatment induced complete abortion by day 15 only in rats with ovaries present, further indicating that DHT was not directly detrimental to the fetuses but acted on the ovaries to induce luteolysis. When DHT treatment was started on day 12, no luteolytic effect was detectable. To determine whether the effect of DHT was mediated by either a decrease in the ovarian production of E, a decline in luteal cell content of luteinizing hormone (LH) receptors or both, testosterone (T) levels in the peripheral circulation and E and P concentrations in the ovarian vein were measured on day 15 in rats implanted with two DHT pellets under the ovarian bursa on day 9. Luteal content of LH receptors was also measured on day 12 in similarly treated rats. DHT treatment had no effect on serum levels or on ovarian vein concentration of E, but induced a significant decrease in the ovarian vein levels of P. DHT also did not depress LH receptor content in corpora lutea. DHT levels in the ovaries increase significantly between days 18 and 22 of pregnancy, concomitant with the cessation of corpus luteum function. These results indicate that DHT possesses a potent luteolytic activity and could be involved in the luteolytic process in the pregnant rat.


Author(s):  
U. Aebi ◽  
E.C. Glavaris ◽  
R. Eichner

Five different classes of intermediate-sized filaments (IFs) have been identified in differentiated eukaryotic cells: vimentin in mesenchymal cells, desmin in muscle cells, neurofilaments in nerve cells, glial filaments in glial cells and keratin filaments in epithelial cells. Despite their tissue specificity, all IFs share several common attributes, including immunological crossreactivity, similar morphology (e.g. about 10 nm diameter - hence ‘10-nm filaments’) and the ability to reassemble in vitro from denatured subunits into filaments virtually indistinguishable from those observed in vivo. Further more, despite their proteinchemical heterogeneity (their MWs range from 40 kDa to 200 kDa and their isoelectric points from about 5 to 8), protein and cDNA sequencing of several IF polypeptides (for refs, see 1,2) have provided the framework for a common structural model of all IF subunits.


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