Minabe Shiori, Ieda Nahoko, Watanabe Youki, Inoue Naoko, Uenoyama Yoshihisa, Maeda Kei-Ichiro, Tsukamura Hiroko
Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Aichi 464-8601, Japan.
Department of Veterinary Medical Sciences, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-8657, Japan.
Endocrinology. 2017 Sep 1;158(9):2918-2929. doi: 10.1210/en.2016-1144.
Exposure to estrogen during the developmental period causes reproductive dysfunction in mammals, because the developing brain is highly sensitive to estrogens. In the present study, we report that long-term exposure to supraphysiological doses of estrogen during the neonatal critical period causes irreversible suppression of Kiss1/kisspeptin expression in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) via estrogen receptor-alpha (ERα) and ERβ, resulting in reproductive dysfunction in female rats. Daily estradiol-benzoate (EB) administration from days 0 to 10 postpartum caused persistent vaginal diestrus in female rats. The female rats showed profound suppression of pulsatile luteinizing hormone (LH) release and ARC Kiss1/kisspeptin expression even after ovariectomy at adulthood. In contrast, female rats treated with a single EB injection at day 5 postpartum exhibited persistent vaginal estrus and showed comparable LH pulses and numbers of ARC Kiss1-expressing cells to vehicle-treated controls after ovariectomy at adulthood. Because the LH secretory response to exogenous kisspeptin was spared in female rats with neonatal long-term estrogen exposure, the LH pulse suppression was most probably due to ARC kisspeptin deficiency. Furthermore, neonatal estrogen might act through both ERα and ERβ, because EB exposure significantly reduced the number of ARC Kiss1-expressing cells in wild-type mice but not in ERα or ERβ knockout mice. Taken together, long-term exposure to supraphysiological doses of estrogen in the developing brain might cause defects in ARC kisspeptin neurons via ERα and ERβ, resulting in inhibition of pulsatile LH release and lack of estrous cyclicity.
在发育时期接触雌激素会导致哺乳动物出现生殖功能障碍,因为发育中的大脑对雌激素高度敏感。在本研究中,我们报告称,在新生关键期长期暴露于超生理剂量的雌激素会通过雌激素受体α(ERα)和雌激素受体β(ERβ)导致弓状核(ARC)中Kiss1/ kisspeptin表达受到不可逆的抑制,从而导致雌性大鼠出现生殖功能障碍。产后第0天至第10天每天给予雌二醇苯甲酸酯(EB)会使雌性大鼠持续处于阴道动情间期。即使成年后进行卵巢切除,雌性大鼠的促黄体生成素(LH)脉冲式释放和ARC Kiss1/kisspeptin表达仍受到显著抑制。相比之下,产后第5天接受单次EB注射的雌性大鼠表现出持续的阴道发情期,并且在成年后进行卵巢切除后,其LH脉冲和ARC中表达Kiss1的细胞数量与接受载体处理的对照组相当。由于在长期暴露于新生儿期雌激素的雌性大鼠中,对外源性吻肽的LH分泌反应得以保留,因此LH脉冲抑制很可能是由于ARC吻肽缺乏所致。此外,新生儿期雌激素可能通过ERα和ERβ发挥作用,因为EB暴露显著减少了野生型小鼠ARC中表达Kiss1的细胞数量,但在ERα或ERβ基因敲除小鼠中则没有。综上所述,发育中的大脑长期暴露于超生理剂量的雌激素可能会通过ERα和ERβ导致ARC吻肽神经元出现缺陷,从而抑制LH的脉冲式释放并导致发情周期缺失。