Volume 9, Issue 6 (November 2007) 9, 751–759; 10.1111/j.1745-7262.2007.00320.x
Androgen receptors are expressed in a variety of human fetal extragenital tissues: an immunohistochemical study
Yasmin Sajjad, Siobhan Quenby, Paul Nickson, David Iwan Lewis-Jones and Gill Vince
1.Reproductive Medicine Unit, Liverpool Women's Hospital, Crown Street, Liverpool L8 7SS, UK 2.School of Reproductive and Developmental Medicine, Division of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool Women's Hospital, Crown Street, Liverpool L8 7SS, UK 3.Division of Immunology, School of Infection and Host Defence, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3GA, UK
Correspondence: Dr Yasmin Sajjad, Reproductive Medicine Unit, Liverpool Women Hospital, Crown Street, Liverpool L8 7SS, UK. Fax: +44-15-1342-8879. E-mail: y.sajjad@btinternet.com
Received 30 January 2007; Accepted 11 June 2007.
Abstract |
Aim: To investigate the expression of androgen receptors in the extragenital tissues of developing human embryo.
Methods: Using immunohistochemistry, we investigated the distribution of androgen receptor (AR) in the extragenital tissues of paraffin-embedded tissue sections of first trimester (8–12 weeks gestation) human embryos. Gender was determined by polymerized chain reaction.
Results: There were no differences in the expression and distribution of AR in male and female embryos at any stage of gestation. AR expression was seen in the thymus gland. The bronchial epithelium of the lungs showed intense positive staining with surrounding stroma negative. Furthermore, positive staining for androgen receptor was exhibited in the spinal cord with a few positive cells in the surrounding tissues. Cardiac valves also showed strong positive staining but with faint reactivity of the surrounding cardiac muscle. There was no staining in kidney, adrenal, liver or bowel.
Conclusion: This study demonstrates that immunoreactive AR protein is present in a wide variety of human first trimester fetal tissues and shows the potential for androgen affecting tissues, which are mostly not considered to be androgen dependent. Moreover, it implies that androgen might act as a trophic factor and affect the early development of these organs rather than simply sexual differentiation.
Keywords: human androgen receptor, extragenital tissues, tissue distribution, fetal tissues, immunohistochemistry
Full Text |
PDF |
中文摘要 |
|
|
Browse: 3730 |
|