Adashi E Y, Resnick C E, Croft C S, Payne D W
Department of Obstetrics/Gynecology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore 21201.
J Biol Chem. 1989 Jul 15;264(20):11591-7.
It has been suggested that resident ovarian macrophages may play a role in the regulation of ovarian function through local paracrine secretion of regulatory molecule(s). It is the objective of the in vitro studies reported herein to evaluate the potential ovarian relevance of one such macrophage product, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha). To this end, use was made of a primary culture system of rat ovarian granulosa cells, the functional status of which was monitored by the acquisition of estrogen, progestin, and proteoglycan biosynthetic capacity. Whereas treatment with the gonadotropin follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), a potent functional regulator, resulted in a substantial increase in the extent of aromatization (conversion of androgenic steroid precursors to estrogens), concomitant exposure to TNF-alpha (10 ng/ml) produced significant (p less than 0.05), yet reversible inhibition (71 +/- 7%) of this FSH effect. This specific activity of TNF-alpha was characterized by a projected minimal effective dose of less than 0.1 ng/ml, an apparent median inhibitory dose of 0.56 +/- 0.14 ng/ml, and a minimal time requirement of 48 h. Significantly, the direct effect of TNF-alpha could not be accounted for by a decrease in cellular viability or plating efficiency, nor by a decrease in the number of cells or their DNA content. Instead, TNF-alpha inhibited FSH hormonal action at the level of stimulatable adenylate cyclase activity, exerting no apparent effect either at the level of the FSH receptor or at site(s) of action distal to cAMP generation. The effect of TNF-alpha was not limited to the attenuation of estrogen biosynthesis, exerting qualitatively similar effects on FSH-supported progestin and proteoglycan biosynthetic capacity. As such, these findings are in keeping with the notion that subnanomolar concentrations of TNF-alpha, possibly of ovarian macrophage origin, may comprise the signal of a paracrine loop designed to attenuate gonadotropin action thereby playing a potential role in the development and/or demise of the ovarian follicle.
有人提出,卵巢中的常驻巨噬细胞可能通过局部旁分泌调节分子来调控卵巢功能。本文所报道的体外研究旨在评估一种巨噬细胞产物——肿瘤坏死因子α(TNF-α)与卵巢的潜在相关性。为此,使用了大鼠卵巢颗粒细胞原代培养系统,并通过获取雌激素、孕激素和蛋白聚糖的生物合成能力来监测其功能状态。促性腺激素卵泡刺激素(FSH)是一种强大的功能调节剂,用其处理会使芳香化作用(雄激素类固醇前体转化为雌激素)的程度大幅增加,而同时暴露于TNF-α(10 ng/ml)会对这种FSH效应产生显著(p<0.05)但可逆的抑制(71±7%)。TNF-α的这种特定活性表现为预计最小有效剂量小于0.1 ng/ml,表观半数抑制剂量为0.56±0.14 ng/ml,最短作用时间为48小时。值得注意的是,TNF-α的直接作用不能用细胞活力或接种效率的降低来解释,也不能用细胞数量或其DNA含量的减少来解释。相反,TNF-α在可刺激的腺苷酸环化酶活性水平上抑制FSH的激素作用,在FSH受体水平或cAMP生成远端的作用位点均未产生明显影响。TNF-α的作用不仅限于减弱雌激素的生物合成,对FSH支持的孕激素和蛋白聚糖生物合成能力也有定性相似的影响。因此,这些发现与以下观点一致:亚纳摩尔浓度的TNF-α可能源自卵巢巨噬细胞,可能构成一个旁分泌回路的信号,旨在减弱促性腺激素的作用,从而在卵巢卵泡的发育和/或退化中发挥潜在作用。