Division of Molecular Parasitology, Department of Biology and Centre for Biological and Medical Research, Heinrich-Heine-University Duesseldorf, Universitaetstrasse 1, 40225 Duesseldorf, Germany.
J Mol Endocrinol. 2010 Dec;45(6):379-90. doi: 10.1677/JME-10-0026. Epub 2010 Sep 15.
Testosterone has been previously shown to induce persistent susceptibility to Plasmodium chabaudi malaria in otherwise resistant female C57BL/6 mice. Here, we investigate as to whether this conversion coincides with permanent changes of hepatic gene expression profiles. Female mice aged 10-12 weeks were treated with testosterone for 3 weeks; then, testosterone treatment was discontinued for 12 weeks before challenging with 10⁶ P. chabaudi-infected erythrocytes. Hepatic gene expression was examined after 12 weeks of testosterone withdrawal and after subsequent infection with P. chabaudi at peak parasitemia, using Affymetrix microarrays with 22 ,690 probe sets representing 14, 000 genes. The expression of 54 genes was found to be permanently changed by testosterone, which remained changed during malaria infection. Most genes were involved in liver metabolism: the female-prevalent genes Cyp2b9, Cyp2b13, Cyp3a41, Cyp3a44, Fmo3, Sult2a2, Sult3a1, and BC014805 were repressed, while the male-prevalent genes Cyp2d9, Cyp7b1, Cyp4a10, Ugt2b1, Ugt2b38, Hsd3b5, and Slco1a1 were upregulated. Genes encoding different nuclear receptors were not persistently changed. Moreover, testosterone induced persistent upregulation of genes involved in hepatocellular carcinoma such as Lama3 and Nox4, whereas genes involved in immune response such as Ifnγ and Igk-C were significantly decreased. Our data provide evidence that testosterone is able to induce specific and robust long-term changes of gene expression profiles in the female mouse liver. In particular, those changes, which presumably indicate masculinized liver metabolism and impaired immune response, may be critical for the testosterone-induced persistent susceptibility of mice to P. chabaudi malaria.
先前的研究表明,睾丸酮可使原本具有抗性的雌性 C57BL/6 小鼠对疟原虫伯氏疟原虫持续易感。在这里,我们研究了这种转变是否与肝基因表达谱的永久性变化相一致。10-12 周龄的雌性小鼠接受睾丸酮治疗 3 周;然后,在感染 10⁶ 感染疟原虫的红细胞之前,停止睾丸酮治疗 12 周。在睾丸酮停药 12 周后和随后感染疟原虫达到高峰寄生虫血症时,使用代表 14000 个基因的 22690 个探针的 Affymetrix 微阵列检查肝基因表达。发现 54 个基因的表达被睾丸酮永久改变,这些基因在疟疾感染期间仍保持改变。大多数基因参与肝脏代谢:雌性优势基因 Cyp2b9、Cyp2b13、Cyp3a41、Cyp3a44、Fmo3、Sult2a2、Sult3a1 和 BC014805 被抑制,而雄性优势基因 Cyp2d9、Cyp7b1、Cyp4a10、Ugt2b1、Ugt2b38、Hsd3b5 和 Slco1a1 被上调。编码不同核受体的基因没有持续改变。此外,睾丸酮诱导与肝癌相关的基因如 Lama3 和 Nox4 的持续上调,而与免疫反应相关的基因如 Ifnγ 和 Igk-C 则显著下调。我们的数据提供了证据,表明睾丸酮能够诱导雌性小鼠肝脏中特定的和强大的长期基因表达谱变化。特别是,那些变化可能表明雄性化的肝脏代谢和受损的免疫反应,可能是睾丸酮诱导的小鼠对伯氏疟原虫持续易感的关键。