Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06260, USA.
BMC Biol. 2010 Aug 31;8:113. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-8-113.
Hormones are critical for early gonadal development in nonmammalian vertebrates, and oestrogen is required for normal ovarian development. In contrast, mammals determine sex by the presence or absence of the SRY gene, and hormones are not thought to play a role in early gonadal development. Despite an XY sex-determining system in marsupial mammals, exposure to oestrogen can override SRY and induce ovarian development of XY gonads if administered early enough. Here we assess the effect of exogenous oestrogen on the molecular pathways of mammalian gonadal development.
We examined the expression of key testicular (SRY, SOX9, AMH and FGF9) and ovarian (WNT4, RSPO1, FOXL2 and FST) markers during gonadal development in the marsupial tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) and used these data to determine the effect of oestrogen exposure on gonadal fate. During normal development, we observed male specific upregulation of AMH and SOX9 as in the mouse and human testis, but this upregulation was initiated before the peak in SRY expression and 4 days before testicular cord formation. Similarly, key genes for ovarian development in mouse and human were also upregulated during ovarian differentiation in the tammar. In particular, there was early sexually dimorphic expression of FOXL2 and WNT4, suggesting that these genes are key regulators of ovarian development in all therian mammals. We next examined the effect of exogenous oestrogen on the development of the mammalian XY gonad. Despite the presence of SRY, exogenous oestrogen blocked the key male transcription factor SOX9 from entering the nuclei of male somatic cells, preventing activation of the testicular pathway and permitting upregulation of key female genes, resulting in ovarian development of the XY gonad.
We have uncovered a mechanism by which oestrogen can regulate gonadal development through the nucleocytoplasmic shuttling of SOX9. This may represent an underlying ancestral mechanism by which oestrogen promotes ovarian development in the gonads of nonmammalian vertebrates. Furthermore, oestrogen may retain this function in adult female mammals to maintain granulosa cell fate in the differentiated ovary by suppressing nuclear translocation of the SOX9 protein. See commentary: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/8/110.
激素对于非哺乳动物脊椎动物早期性腺发育至关重要,而雌激素是正常卵巢发育所必需的。相比之下,哺乳动物通过存在或不存在 SRY 基因来决定性别,并且人们认为激素在早期性腺发育中不起作用。尽管在有袋类哺乳动物中存在 XY 性别决定系统,但如果在足够早的时间给予雌激素,它可以替代 SRY 并诱导 XY 性腺的卵巢发育。在这里,我们评估了外源性雌激素对哺乳动物性腺发育分子途径的影响。
我们检查了关键睾丸(SRY、SOX9、AMH 和 FGF9)和卵巢(WNT4、RSPO1、FOXL2 和 FST)标志物在有袋动物塔马尔袋狸(Macropus eugenii)中的表达情况,并利用这些数据来确定雌激素暴露对性腺命运的影响。在正常发育过程中,我们观察到 AMH 和 SOX9 的雄性特异性上调,就像在小鼠和人类睾丸中一样,但这种上调发生在 SRY 表达高峰期之前,并且在睾丸索形成之前 4 天。同样,在塔马尔的卵巢分化过程中,用于卵巢发育的关键基因在小鼠和人类中也上调。特别是,FOXL2 和 WNT4 存在早期的性别二态性表达,这表明这些基因是所有真兽类哺乳动物卵巢发育的关键调节因子。我们接下来检查了外源性雌激素对哺乳动物 XY 性腺发育的影响。尽管存在 SRY,但外源性雌激素阻止了关键雄性转录因子 SOX9 进入雄性体细胞的核内,从而阻止了睾丸途径的激活,并允许关键雌性基因上调,导致 XY 性腺的卵巢发育。
我们揭示了雌激素通过 SOX9 的核质穿梭来调节性腺发育的机制。这可能代表了雌激素在非哺乳动物脊椎动物的性腺中促进卵巢发育的一个潜在的祖先机制。此外,雌激素可能通过抑制 SOX9 蛋白的核转位来维持分化卵巢中的颗粒细胞命运,从而在成年雌性哺乳动物中保留这种功能。参见评论:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/8/110。