Effects of hormones and protein kinase inhibitors on expression of steroidogenic enzyme promoters in electroporated primary rat granulosa cells

Joseph Orly, Jeffrey W. Clemens, Orna Singer, Jo Anne S. Richards*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Previous studies have shown that inhibitors of protein tyrosine kinases, tyrphostins, can markedly attenuate the steady-state levels of mRNAs of hormone-induced genes expressed in ovarian cells. To further elucidate the mechanism of tyrphostin action, rat granulosa cells were electroporated with chimeric expression vectors containing the promoters of two key steroidogenic genes, cholesterol side chain cleavage cytochrome P450 (CYP11A; P450scc) and aromatase cytochrome P450 (CYP19; P450arom), ligated to the CAT reporter gene. The electroporation method of transfection documents that the respective promoter-reporter constructs, -379sccCAT and -534aromCAT, can confer greater than 10-fold FSH/cAMP responsiveness to the reporter genes expressed in naive granulosa cells. Furthermore, the electroporation approach allows transfection of DNA into small numbers of cells and facilitates the assay of expression in cells isolated from follicles at advanced stages of differentiation. In naive granulosa cells, the functional activities of -379sccCAT, -534aromCAT, and -16SαCGCAT were abolished by the A-kinase specific inhibitor, H89, supporting the notion that activation of protein kinase A is obligatory for transcriptional activation of the promoter regions within these genes. Similar inhibitory effects were also observed for tyrphostin AG18, thus implicating a tyrosine kinase in the regulation of the steroidogenic genes. As a result of eCG/hCG treatments, a gradual loss of transfection efficiency accompanied by decreasing forskolin induction of CAT expression was observed in the differentiating granulosalutein cells. Although the reason(s) for the apparent loss in the ability of hormones to regulate chimeric gene expression remains to be determined, cell and promoter refractoriness to hormone treatment appears to reflect a fundamental change in the mechanism of promoter activation in the differentiated cells compared to the naive granulosa cells.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)208-218
Number of pages11
JournalBiology of Reproduction
Volume54
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1996

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Effects of hormones and protein kinase inhibitors on expression of steroidogenic enzyme promoters in electroporated primary rat granulosa cells'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this