Waxman D J
Department of Biology, Boston University, MA 02215, USA.
Novartis Found Symp. 2000;227:61-74; discussion 75-81. doi: 10.1002/0470870796.ch5.
Growth hormone (GH) exerts sexually dimorphic effects on liver gene transcription that are regulated by the temporal pattern of pituitary GH release; this release is intermittent in male rats and nearly continuous in females. Comparisons of liver nuclear protein tyrosine phosphorylation in male and female rats have led to the discovery that the liver transcription factor STAT5b is tyrosine phosphorylated in male but not female rats in response to GH pulses. Intermittent plasma GH pulses trigger a rapid and repeated tyrosine phosphorylation and nuclear translocation of liver STAT5b in intact male rats, while the more continuous pattern of GH exposure down-regulates the STAT5b signalling pathway in female rat liver. The central importance of STAT5b for the physiological effects of GH pulses has been verified using a mouse gene knockout model. STAT5b gene disruption leads to a major loss of multiple sexually differentiated responses associated with the sexually dimorphic pattern of pituitary GH secretion. Male-characteristic body growth rates and male-specific liver gene expression are decreased to wild-type female levels in STAT5b-/- males, while female-predominant liver gene products are increased in males to near female levels. STAT5b is thus a liver-expressed, latent cytoplasmic transcription factor that undergoes repeated tyrosine phosphorylation and nuclear translocation in response to intermittent plasma GH stimulation, and is a key intracellular mediator of the stimulatory effects of GH pulses on male-specific liver gene transcription. Other studies indicate, however, that STAT5a and STAT5b are both required for constitutive expression in female, but not male liver, of certain GH-regulated CYP enzymes. GH activation of both STAT5 proteins, which in turn form distinct homodimeric and heterodimeric DNA-binding complexes, is thus an important determinant of the sex-dependent and gene-specific effects that GH has on the liver.
生长激素(GH)对肝脏基因转录具有性别差异效应,这种效应受垂体GH释放的时间模式调控;在雄性大鼠中,GH释放是间歇性的,而在雌性大鼠中则几乎是连续的。对雄性和雌性大鼠肝脏核蛋白酪氨酸磷酸化的比较发现,肝脏转录因子STAT5b在雄性大鼠中会因GH脉冲而发生酪氨酸磷酸化,而在雌性大鼠中则不会。完整雄性大鼠中,间歇性血浆GH脉冲会触发肝脏STAT5b快速且反复的酪氨酸磷酸化和核转位,而GH暴露更持续的模式会下调雌性大鼠肝脏中的STAT5b信号通路。使用小鼠基因敲除模型已证实STAT5b对GH脉冲生理效应的核心重要性。STAT5b基因破坏导致与垂体GH分泌的性别差异模式相关的多种性别分化反应大幅丧失。在STAT5b基因敲除的雄性大鼠中,雄性特征的身体生长速率和雄性特异性肝脏基因表达降至野生型雌性水平,而雄性中以雌性为主的肝脏基因产物增加至接近雌性水平。因此,STAT5b是一种在肝脏中表达的潜在细胞质转录因子,它会因间歇性血浆GH刺激而发生反复的酪氨酸磷酸化和核转位,并且是GH脉冲对雄性特异性肝脏基因转录刺激作用的关键细胞内介质。然而,其他研究表明,STAT5a和STAT5b对于某些GH调节的CYP酶在雌性而非雄性肝脏中的组成型表达都是必需的。因此,两种STAT5蛋白的GH激活(这反过来又形成不同的同二聚体和异二聚体DNA结合复合物)是GH对肝脏产生性别依赖性和基因特异性效应重要决定因素。