Mesiano S, Jaffe R B
Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco 94143-0556, USA.
Endocr Rev. 1997 Jun;18(3):378-403. doi: 10.1210/edrv.18.3.0304.
The unique characteristics of the primate (particularly human) fetal adrenal were first realized in the early 1900s when its morphology was examined in detail and compared with that of other species. The unusual architecture of the human fetal adrenal cortex, with its unique and disproportionately enlarged fetal zone, its compact definitive zone, and its dramatic remodeling soon after birth captured the interest of developmental anatomists. Many detailed anatomical studies describing the morphology of the developing human fetal adrenal were reported between 1920 and 1960, and these morphological descriptions have not changed significantly. More recently, it has become clear that fetal adrenal cortical growth involves cellular hypertrophy, hyperplasia, apoptosis, and migration and is best described by the migration theory, i.e. cells proliferate in the periphery, migrate centripetally, differentiate during their migration to form the functional cortical zones, and then likely undergo apoptosis in the center of the cortex. Consistent with this model, cells of intermediate phenotype, arranged in columnar cords typical of migration, have been identified between the definitive and fetal zones. This cortical area has been referred to as the transitional zone and, based on the expression of steroidogenic enzymes, we consider it to be a functionally distinct cortical zone. Elegant experiments during the 1950s and 1960s demonstrated the central role of the primate fetal adrenal cortex in establishing the estrogenic milieu of pregnancy. Those findings were among the first indications of the function and physiological role of the human fetal adrenal cortex and led Diczfalusy and co-workers to propose the concept of the feto-placental unit, in which DHEA-S produced by the fetal adrenal cortex is used by the placenta for estrogen synthesis. Tissue and cell culture techniques, together with improved steroid assays, revealed that the fetal zone is the primary source of DHEA-S, and that its steroidogenic activity is regulated by ACTH. In recent years, function of the human and rhesus monkey fetal adrenal cortical zones has been reexamined by assessing the localization and ontogeny of steroidogenic enzyme expression. The primate fetal adrenal cortex is composed of three functionally distinct zones: 1) the fetal zone, which throughout gestation does not express 3 beta HSD but does express P450scc and P450c17 required for DHEA-S synthesis; 2) the transitional zone, which early in gestation is functionally identical to the fetal zone but late in gestation (after 25-30 weeks) expresses 3 beta HSD, P450scc, and P450c17, and therefore is the likely site of glucocorticoid synthesis, and 3) the definitive zone, which lacks P450c17 throughout gestation but late in gestation (after 22-24 weeks) expresses 3 beta HSD and P450scc, and therefore is the likely site of mineralocorticoid synthesis. Indirect evidence, based on effects of P450c21 deficiency and maternal estriol concentrations, indicate that the fetal adrenal cortex produces cortisol and DHEA-S early in gestation (6-12 weeks). However, controversy exists as to whether cortisol is produced de novo or derived from the metabolism of progesterone, as data regarding the expression of 3 beta HSD in the fetal adrenal cortex early in gestation are conflicting. During the 1960s, Liggins and colleagues demonstrated that in the sheep, cortisol secreted by the fetal adrenal cortex late in gestation regulates maturation of the fetus and initiates the cascade of events leading to parturition. Those pioneering discoveries provided insight into the mechanism underlying the timing of parturition and therefore were of particular interest to obstetricians and perinatologists confronted with the problems of preterm labor. However, although cortisol emanating from the fetal adrenal cortex promotes fetal maturation in primates as it does in sheep, its role in the regulation of primate parturition, unlike that in sheep
灵长类(尤其是人类)胎儿肾上腺的独特特征最早是在20世纪初被认识到的,当时人们对其形态进行了详细检查,并与其他物种的肾上腺形态进行了比较。人类胎儿肾上腺皮质不同寻常的结构,包括其独特且不成比例增大的胎儿带、紧密的永久带,以及出生后不久的显著重塑,引起了发育解剖学家的兴趣。1920年至1960年间报道了许多详细的解剖学研究,描述了发育中的人类胎儿肾上腺的形态,这些形态学描述并没有显著变化。最近,已经明确胎儿肾上腺皮质生长涉及细胞肥大、增生、凋亡和迁移,并且最好用迁移理论来描述,即细胞在外围增殖,向心迁移,在迁移过程中分化形成功能性皮质区,然后可能在皮质中心发生凋亡。与该模型一致,在永久带和胎儿带之间已经鉴定出具有典型迁移柱状索排列的中间表型细胞。这个皮质区域被称为过渡带,基于类固醇生成酶的表达,我们认为它是一个功能上不同的皮质区。20世纪50年代和60年代的精密实验证明了灵长类胎儿肾上腺皮质在建立妊娠雌激素环境中的核心作用。这些发现是人类胎儿肾上腺皮质功能和生理作用的首批迹象之一,并促使迪茨法卢西及其同事提出了胎儿 - 胎盘单位的概念,其中胎儿肾上腺皮质产生的硫酸脱氢表雄酮(DHEA - S)被胎盘用于雌激素合成。组织和细胞培养技术,以及改进的类固醇测定方法,揭示了胎儿带是DHEA - S的主要来源,并且其类固醇生成活性受促肾上腺皮质激素(ACTH)调节。近年来,通过评估类固醇生成酶表达的定位和个体发生,对人类和恒河猴胎儿肾上腺皮质区的功能进行了重新研究。灵长类胎儿肾上腺皮质由三个功能不同的区域组成:1)胎儿带,在整个妊娠期不表达3β - 羟类固醇脱氢酶(3βHSD),但表达硫酸脱氢表雄酮合成所需的胆固醇侧链裂解酶(P450scc)和17α - 羟化酶(P450c17);2)过渡带,在妊娠早期功能上与胎儿带相同,但在妊娠晚期(25 - 30周后)表达3βHSD、P450scc和P450c17,因此可能是糖皮质激素合成的部位;3)永久带,在整个妊娠期缺乏P450c17,但在妊娠晚期(22 - 24周后)表达3βHSD和P450scc,因此可能是盐皮质激素合成的部位。基于P450c21缺乏和母体雌三醇浓度的影响的间接证据表明,胎儿肾上腺皮质在妊娠早期(6 - 12周)产生皮质醇和DHEA - S。然而,关于皮质醇是从头合成还是由孕酮代谢产生存在争议,因为关于妊娠早期胎儿肾上腺皮质中3βHSD表达的数据相互矛盾。在20世纪60年代,利金斯及其同事证明,在绵羊中,妊娠晚期胎儿肾上腺皮质分泌的皮质醇调节胎儿成熟并启动导致分娩的一系列事件。这些开创性的发现为分娩时间的潜在机制提供了见解,因此对于面临早产问题的产科医生和围产医学专家特别有意义。然而,尽管来自胎儿肾上腺皮质的皮质醇在灵长类动物中与在绵羊中一样促进胎儿成熟,但其在调节灵长类分娩中的作用,与在绵羊中的作用不同