Volume 15, Issue 5 (September 2013) 15, 685–691; 10.1038/aja.2013.55
Effects of luteinizing hormone and androgen on the development of rat progenitor Leydig cells in vitro and in vivo
Jing-Jing Guo1,*, Xue Ma2,3,*, Claire QF Wang1, Yu-Fei Ge2, Qing-Quan Lian1, Dianne O Hardy2, Yu-Fei Zhang4, Qiang Dong3, Yun-Fei Xu5 and Ren-Shan Ge1,2
1The 2nd Affiliated Hospital, Wenzhou Medical College, Wenzhou 325027, China 2Population Council & Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065, USA 3Department of Urology, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China 4Mudanjiang Medical College, Mudanjiang 157011, China 5Department of Urology, the Affiliated 10th People's Hospital of Tongji University, Shanghai 200072, China
*These authors equally contributed to this work.
Correspondence: Professor RS Ge, (r_ge@yahoo.com); Professor YF Xu, (xuyunfeibb@sina.com)
Received 2 January 2013; Revised 16 February 2013; Accepted 8 April 2013 Advance online publication 24 June 2013
Abstract |
Progenitor Leydig cells are derived from stem cells. The proliferation and differentiation of progenitor Leydig cells significantly contributes to Leydig cell number during puberty. However, the regulation of these processes remains unclear. The objective of the present study was to determine whether luteinizing hormone (LH) or androgen contributes to the proliferation and differentiation of progenitor Leydig cells. Fourteen-day-old male Sprague–Dawley rats were treated for 7 days with NalGlu, which is a gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonist, to reduce the secretion of LH in the pituitary and thus, androgen in the testis. Rats were co-administered with LH or 7α-methyl-nortestosterone (MENT), which is an androgen resistant to metabolism by 5α-reductase 1 in progenitor Leydig cells, and the subsequent effects of LH or androgen were measured. 3H-Thymidine was also intravenously injected into rats to study thymidine incorporation in progenitor Leydig cells. Progenitor Leydig cells were examined. NalGlu administration reduced progenitor Leydig cell proliferation by 83%. In addition, LH or MENT treatment restored Leydig cell proliferative capacity to 73% or 50% of control, respectively. The messenger RNA levels of proliferation-related genes were measured using real-time PCR. The expression levels of Igf1, Lifr, Pdgfra, Bcl2, Ccnd3 and Pcna were upregulated by MENT, and those of Pdgfra, Ccnd3 and Pcna were upregulated by LH. Both LH and MENT stimulated the differentiation of progenitor Leydig cells in vitro. We concluded that both LH and MENT were involved in regulating the development of progenitor Leydig cells.
Keywords: luteinizing hormone; progenitor Leydig cell; proliferation; testosterone
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