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In the current study we test the hypothesis that liver receptor homologue-1 (LRH; designated NR5A2) is involved in the regulation of steroid hormone production. The potential role of LRH was assessed by first examining expression in human steroidogenic tissues and second by examining effects on transcription of genes encoding enzymes involved in steroidogenesis. LRH is closely related to steroidogenic factor 1 (SF1; designated NR5A1), which is expressed in most steroidogenic tissues and regulates expression of several steroid-metabolizing enzymes. LRH transcripts were expressed at high levels in the human ovary and testis. Adrenal and placenta expressed much lower levels of LRH than either ovary or liver. To examine the effects of LRH on steroidogenic capacity we used reporter constructs prepared with the 5'-flanking region of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR), cholesterol side-chain cleavage (CYP11A1), 3beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type II (HSD3B2), 17alpha hydroxylase, 17,20 lyase (CYP17), 11beta hydroxylase (CYP11B1) and aldosterone synthase (CYP11B2). Co-transfection of these reporter constructs with LRH expression vector demonstrated that like SF1, LRH enhanced reporter activity driven by flanking DNA from StAR, CYP11A1, CYP17, HSD3B2, and CYP11B1. Reporter constructs driven by CYP11A1 and CYP17 were increased the most by co-transfection with LRH and SF1. Of the promoters examined only HSD3B2 was more sensitive to LRH than SF1. The high level of ovarian and testicular LRH expression make it likely that LRH plays an important role in the regulation of gonadal function.
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Transient postnatal hypothyroidism in male rats induces a prolonged proliferation of immature Sertoli cells. This change in Sertoli cell replication at young ages is coincident with enhanced and prolonged aromatase activity that leads to a marked increase in the conversion of androgens into estrogens. Both events are drastically inhibited by tri-iodothyronine (T(3)) replacement either in vivo or in vitro. This study, after the immunolocalization of aromatase in cultured rat Sertoli cells, examined the effects elicited by T(3) on this enzyme, by simultaneously investigating three functional levels of aromatase: mRNA expression, protein content, and enzymatic activity. The immunolocalization of cytochrome P450 aromatase (P450 arom) was shown in the cytoplasm of cultured Sertoli cells from 15- and 21-day-old rats. Western blot analysis revealed an enhancement of aromatase protein content upon stimulation with N(6),2'-O-dibutyryladenosine-3':5'-cyclic monophosphate ((Bu)(2)cAMP) that was clearly down-regulated by T(3). The presence of a functional P450 arom protein in purified Sertoli cells was confirmed by the measurement of [(3)H]H(2)O released after incubation with [1 beta-(3)H]androst-4-ene-3,17-dione. With 100 nM T3, a decrease in both P450 arom mRNA levels and aromatase activity was observed. The aromatase enzymatic activity was strongly stimulated by (Bu)(2)cAMP and markedly down-regulated by T(3). In contrast, the strong increase in aromatase mRNA upon (Bu)(2)cAMP stimulation was apparently unaffected by T(3) administration. This paper shows how the identification of an altered transcript induced by T(3) coding for putative truncated and inactive aromatase protein might explain such a decrease in aromatase activity in T(3)-treated cells. On the basis of these results, it is concluded that at least two mechanisms could be involved in the down-regulatory effect of T(3) on aromatase activity in prepuberal Sertoli cells. The first mechanism is linked to a possible direct modulatory role for T(3) in the regulation of the aromatase promoter, whilst the second one is represented by the induction of altered transcripts coding for truncated and inactive aromatase proteins.
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Abstract
A possible role of tri-iodothyronine (T3) on the interplay between testicular steroids and Sertoli cells has been investigated on the basis of previous findings demonstrating a direct inhibitory influence of T3 on aromatase activity and oestradiol production in peripuberal Sertoli cells. In this context, the present study was focused on the effects of T3 on oestrogen receptor (ER) and androgen receptor (AR) contents in the cytosol and nucleus of Sertoli cells isolated from 2-, 3- and 4-week-old euthyroid, hypothyroid and hypothyroid treated rats.
Hypothyroidism was induced by the oral administration of 0·025% methimazole (MMI) from birth until the rats were killed at 2, 3 and 4 weeks of age. Half of the MMI-treated animals were injected i.p. with l-tri-iodothyronine (T3; 3 μg/100 g body weight) during the last week before death. Sertoli cells from all groups were initially cultured under basal conditions for the first 24 h and subsequently in the presence of testosterone with or without T3 for an additional 24 h. Hypothyroidism was associated with severe impairment of body as well as testicular growth. Euthyroid ERs showed an elevated K d (0·76 nm) which was similar in the different age groups investigated. The in vitro addition of T3 or testosterone induced a decrease in ER content and this decrease was greater after exposure to both hormones. In 2- and 3-week-old hypothyroid rats, ER content was markedly increased and was reversed in euthyroid rats when T3 was given in vivo. When ERs were assayed in the Sertoli cell nucleus and cytoplasm of 2- and 3-week-old animals, a strong relationship in ER content in the two cellular compartments was observed. Neither of the hormones tested seemed to affect the AR content in the nucleus significantly, while the in vitro addition of testosterone or T3 or both hormones together augmented the ARs in the cytosol to a greater extent, resulting in an increase in their total (cytosolic and nuclear) content in the cells.
The present data suggest that T3 down-regulates ERs and up-regulates ARs in peripuberal Sertoli cells. The additive effect of testosterone and T3 in up-regulating ARs could possibly involve a role for T3 in influencing the androgen responsiveness of the Sertoli cells during spermatogenesis.
Journal of Endocrinology (1996) 148, 43–50
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Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate the influence of thyroid hormones on androgen metabolism in Sertoli cells isolated from 3- and 4- week-old rats.
Hypothyroidism was induced by the oral administration of 0·025% methimazole (MMI) from birth until the rats were killed at 3 and 4 weeks of age. Half of the MMI-treated animals were injected i.p. with l-tri-iodothyronine (T3 3 μg/100 g body weight) during the last week before death. Sertoli cells from all groups were initially cultured under basal conditions for the first 24 h and subsequently in the presence of testosterone with or without T3 for an additional 24 h. Hypothyroidism was associated with severe impairment of body as well as testicular growth. Indeed, body and testicular weights were similar in 4-week-old hypothyroid animals to those in 3-week-old control rats.
Testosterone metabolism in Sertoli cells isolated from 3- and 4-week-old hypothyroid rats was mainly expressed by the lowering of 5α-dihydrotestosterone + androstane 3α, 17β–diol and an enhanced formation of 5α-reduced steroids with poor androgenic properties (e.g. 5α–androstane, 3, 17α-dione (androstanedione), 5α–androstan, 3-ol-17-one (androsterone)). Treatment of the same group of animals with T3 in vivo and in vitro did not influence the pattern of 5α–reductase steroids substantially.
The most striking finding in the Sertoli cells of 3-week-old hypothyroid rats was the dramatic enhancement of oestradiol formation which persisted to a lesser extent 1 week later. Oestradiol formation was greatly decreased by the addition of T3 in vivo and in vitro in hypothyroid animals.
These results suggest that T3 might influence androgen metabolism during the functional maturation of Sertoli cells.
Journal of Endocrinology (1994) 140, 349–355