Effect of cGMP analogues and protein kinase G blocker on secretory activity, apoptosis and the cAMP/protein kinase A system in porcine ovarian granulosa cells in vitro

Author(s):  
Alexander V Sirotkin ◽  
Alexander V Makarevich ◽  
Juray Pivko ◽  
Jan Kotwica ◽  
Hans-Gottfried Genieser ◽  
...  
1999 ◽  
Vol 163 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
AV Sirotkin ◽  
AV Makarevich

We have studied the action of GH on the production of hormones, growth factors, growth factor-binding protein and the occurrence of apoptosis in bovine ovarian granulosa cells, as well as the role of cAMP-stimulated protein kinase A (PKA) in the mediation of these effects. For this purpose we investigated the effects of exogenous bovine GH (0.001-10 microgram/ml), PKA blockers KT5720 (100 ng/ml) and adenosine-3',5'-monophosphothiodate (Rp-cAMPS) (1 micromol), alone and in combination, on IGF-I, IGF-binding protein (IGFBP)-3, oxytocin, progesterone and estradiol secretion, cAMP and PKA content and the occurrence of apoptosis.The secretion of hormones, IGF-I and IGFBP-3 into the culture medium was measured using RIA/IRMA. The presence of PKA was detected using immunocytochemistry and Western immunoblotting. The presence of cAMP in cells was demonstrated using immunocytochemistry, whilst the proportion of apoptotic cells was determined by the TUNEL method.It was found that the addition of GH to the culture medium strongly (P<0.05) stimulated IGF-I (at a concentration of 0.001-10 microgram GH/ml medium), IGFBP-3 (0.001-1 microgram GH/ml) and oxytocin (0.01-10 microgram GH/ml) secretion. Low concentrations (1-100 ng/ml) of GH stimulated, whilst a higher concentration (10 microgram/ml) inhibited estradiol output. GH slightly (P<0.05) inhibited progesterone (1-100 ng GH/ml) secretion and significantly (P<0.05) decreased the incidence of apoptosis (0.01-1 microgram GH/ml) in cultured cells. The addition of GH (100 ng/ml) caused a dramatic (P<0.05) increase in the proportion of cells possessing the immunoreactive catalytic subunit of PKA and a slight decrease in the proportion of cells containing the regulatory PKA subunit.PKA blockers KT5720 and Rp-cAMPS significantly (P<0.05) reduced the proportion of granulosa cells containing cAMP, and the catalytic and (in the case of KT5720) regulatory subunits of PKA. KT5720 given alone significantly (P<0.05) inhibited the secretion of IGFBP-3, but not that of IGF-I or progesterone. Rp-cAMPS decreased (P<0.05) the secretion of oxytocin but not that of estradiol output or the occurrence of apoptosis. KT5720 and Rp-cAMPS fully or partially prevented the GH effect on IGF-I, IGFBP-3, oxytocin, progesterone, estradiol and apoptosis.These observations suggest the involvement of GH and a cAMP/PKA-dependent intracellular cascade in the control of IGF-I, IGFBP-3, oxytocin, progesterone, estradiol, cAMP and apoptosis in bovine ovarian granulosa cells. The stimulation of PKA by GH and the prevention of GH-induced effects by PKA blockers suggest that the observed GH effects on bovine ovarian cells are probably mediated by the cAMP/PKA system.


Reproduction ◽  
2001 ◽  
pp. 245-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
SJ Tsai ◽  
MC Wiltbank

Prostaglandins have been implicated in various aspects of ovarian function including ovulation and luteolysis. In this study, the expression and regulation of inducible prostagland in G/H synthase (PGHS-2) and PGF(2alpha) receptors were investigated in bovine granulosa cells at various stages of differentiation. Firstly, the induction of PGF(2alpha) receptor mRNA and PGHS-2 mRNA in preovulatory granulosa cells was evaluated. Granulosa cells were collected from preovulatory follicles and cultured for 1, 4, 7 or 10 days. Cells were treated with hCG (10 iu) or with increasing doses of forskolin (0-10 micromol l(-1)) for 24 h. Forskolin increased steady-state concentrations of mRNA for PGHS-2 (> 20-fold) and PGF(2alpha) receptor (> 1000-fold) in a dose-dependent fashion. Use of selective protein kinase A inhibitor (H89) reduced both hCG- and forskolin-induced expression of PGF(2alpha) receptor mRNA and PGHS-2 mRNA. The hypothesis that luteinized granulosa cells would acquire PGF(2alpha) responsiveness similar to responses to PGF(2alpha) observed in vivo was also evaluated. Treatment with PGF(2alpha) (100 nmol l(-1)) reduced forskolin-induced expression of PGF(2alpha) receptor mRNA on days 4, 7 and 10, but not on day 1 of culture (n = 3). Treatment with PGF(2alpha) did not change forskolin-induced expression of PGHS-2 mRNA on or before day 4 of culture. In contrast, PGF(2alpha) significantly increased PGHS-2 mRNA expression in granulosa cells primed with forskolin for 7 or 10 days. In conclusion, expression of PGHS-2 and PGF(2alpha) receptor mRNA is protein kinase A-dependent in preovulatory bovine granulosa cells. Granulosa cells become PGF(2alpha)-responsive soon after expression of PGF(2alpha) receptor, whereas further differentiation is required before PGF(2alpha) induces PGHS-2 mRNA upregulation. These results demonstrate that at least two key transitions are required in PGF(2alpha)-induced luteal regression in the mid-cycle corpus luteum.


2008 ◽  
pp. 437-442
Author(s):  
AV Sirotkin ◽  
M Mlynček ◽  
AV Makarevich ◽  
I Florkovičová ◽  
L Hetényi

The aim of our in vitro studies was to understand the role of leptin in controlling proliferation, apoptosis, and protein kinase A (PKA) in human ovarian cells. We analyzed the in vitro effects of leptin (0, 1, 10 or 100 ng/ml) on the accumulation of proliferation-related peptides (PCNA, cyclin B1), apoptosisassociated peptide (Bax) and the intracellular signaling molecule PKA in cultured human granulosa cells using immunocytochemistry and Western immunoblotting. It was observed that leptin stimulated in a dose-dependent manner the accumulation of PCNA (at doses 1-100 ng/ml), cyclin B1 (at doses 10 or 100 ng/ml), Bax (at doses 10 or 100 ng/ml) and PKA (at doses 1-100 ng/ml) in cultured human ovarian cells. These observations suggest the ability of leptin to control directly human ovarian cell functions: proliferation, apoptosis, and intracellular messenger PKA.


Genetics ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 141 (4) ◽  
pp. 1507-1520 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Meléndez ◽  
W Li ◽  
D Kalderon

Abstract The DC2 gene was isolated previously on the basis of sequence similarity to DC0, the major Drosophila protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunit gene. We show here that the 67-kD Drosophila DC2 protein behaves as a PKA catalytic subunit in vitro. DC2 is transcribed in mesodermal anlagen of early embryos. This expression depends on dorsal but on neither twist nor snail activity. DC2 transcriptional fusions mimic this embryonic expression and are also expressed in subsets of cells in the optic lamina, wing disc and leg discs of third instar larvae. A saturation screen of a small deficiency interval containing DC2 for recessive lethal mutations yielded no DC2 alleles. We therefore isolated new deficiencies to generate deficiency trans-heterozygotes that lacked DC2 activity. These animals were viable and fertile. The absence of DC2 did not affect the viability or phenotype of imaginal disc cells lacking DC0 activity or embryonic hatching of animals with reduced DC0 activity. Furthermore, transgenes expressing DC2 from a DC0 promoter did not efficiently rescue a variety of DC0 mutant phenotypes. These observations indicate that DC2 is not an essential gene and is unlikely to be functionally redundant with DC0, which has multiple unique functions during development.


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