The Gene Encoding Nerve Growth Factor Is Expressed in the Immature Rat Ovary: Effect of Denervation and Hormonal Treatment*
Autor: | Kathy H. Katz, Hernan E. Lara, Sergio R. Ojeda, Diane F. Hill |
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Rok vydání: | 1990 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Sympathetic Nervous System Ovary Biology Endocrinology Internal medicine Gene expression medicine Animals Nerve Growth Factors RNA Messenger Hypophysectomy Denervation Messenger RNA Nurse anesthetist Submandibular gland Hormones Rats medicine.anatomical_structure Nerve growth factor Gene Expression Regulation nervous system Autoradiography Female business business.employer Hormone |
Zdroj: | Endocrinology. 126:357-363 |
ISSN: | 1945-7170 0013-7227 |
Popis: | The rat ovary is innervated by sympathetic nerve fibers. Since the development and survival of peripheral sympathetic neurons innervating nonreproductive organs have been shown to depend on the production of nerve growth factor (NGF) by the innervated tissues, the present experiments were undertaken to determine if the immature rat ovary has the capability of synthesizing NGF. Blot hybridization of ovarian polyadenylated RNA (A+-RNA) to a NGF cRNA probe revealed the presence of a 1.3- to 1.4-kilobase (kb) mRNA species similar to mature NGF mRNA detected in mouse submaxillary gland, a source rich in NGF. Quantitation of NGF protein by a sensitive and specific two-site enzyme immunoassay demonstrated the presence of NGF in juvenile ovaries at levels comparable to those found in other sympathetically innervated tissues. Neither denervation of the ovary nor treatment with gonadotropins (hCG and FSH) or somatomammotropins (PRL and GH) affected the levels of NGF mRNA. However, denervation significantly increased NGF levels, suggesting that, as in other target tissues, denervation prevents the retrograde transport of NGF by the sympathetic terminals and leads to accumulation of the protein at its site of production. It is concluded that 1) the developing ovary is able to both transcribe the NGF gene and translate its mRNA into NGF protein; and 2) the NGF content in the ovary is regulated by its innervation. The results provide the biochemical basis for the concept, elaborated in the companion paper, that NGF through its trophic actions on ovarian sympathetic neurons contributes to the regulation of ovarian development and, hence, to the acquisition of female reproductive capacity. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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