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Chromosome Y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone

BACKGROUND: We have reported previously that when chromosome Y (chrY) from the mouse strain C57BL/6J (ChrY(C57)) was substituted for that of A/J mice (ChrY(A)), cardiomyocytes from the resulting "chromosome substitution" C57BL/6J-chrY(A )strain were smaller than that of their C57BL/6J coun...

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Autores principales: Llamas, Bastien, Verdugo, Ricardo A, Churchill, Gary A, Deschepper, Christian F
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2679052/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19351403
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-150
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author Llamas, Bastien
Verdugo, Ricardo A
Churchill, Gary A
Deschepper, Christian F
author_facet Llamas, Bastien
Verdugo, Ricardo A
Churchill, Gary A
Deschepper, Christian F
author_sort Llamas, Bastien
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: We have reported previously that when chromosome Y (chrY) from the mouse strain C57BL/6J (ChrY(C57)) was substituted for that of A/J mice (ChrY(A)), cardiomyocytes from the resulting "chromosome substitution" C57BL/6J-chrY(A )strain were smaller than that of their C57BL/6J counterparts. In reverse, when chrY(A )from A/J mice was substituted for that of chrY(C57), cardiomyocytes from the resulting A/J-chrY(C57 )strain were larger than in their A/J counterparts. We further used these strains to test whether: 1) the origin of chrY could also be linked to differences in the profile of gene expression in the hearts of adult male mice, and 2) post-pubertal testosterone could play a role in the differential morphologic and/or molecular effects of chrY(C57 )and chrY(A). RESULTS: The increased size of cardiomyocytes from adult male C57BL/6J mice compared to C57BL/6J-chrY(A )resulted from the absence of hypertrophic effects of post-pubertal testosterone on cells from the latter strain. However, gene profiling revealed that the latter effect could not be explained on the basis of an insensitivity of cells from C57BL/6J-chrY(A )to androgens, since even more cardiac genes were affected by post-pubertal testosterone in C57BL/6J-chrY(A )hearts than in C57BL/6J. By testing for interaction between the effects of surgery and strain, we identified 249 "interaction genes" whose expression was affected by post-pubertal testosterone differentially according to the genetic origin of chrY. These interaction genes were found to be enriched within a limited number of signaling pathways, including: 1) p53 signaling, which comprises the interacting genes Ccnd1, Pten and Cdkn1a that are also potential co-regulators of the androgen receptors, and 2) circadian rhythm, which comprises Arntl/Bmal1, which may in turn regulate cell growth via the control of Cdkn1a. CONCLUSION: Although post-pubertal testosterone increased the size of cardiomyocytes from male C56BL/6J mice but not that from their C57BL/6J-chrY(A )counterparts, it affected gene expression in the hearts from both strains. However, several cardiac genes responded to post-pubertal testosterone in a strict strain-selective manner, which provides possible mechanisms explaining how chrY may, in part via interference with androgen regulatory events, be linked to morphologic differences of cardiac cells of adult male mice.
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spelling pubmed-26790522009-05-08 Chromosome Y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone Llamas, Bastien Verdugo, Ricardo A Churchill, Gary A Deschepper, Christian F BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: We have reported previously that when chromosome Y (chrY) from the mouse strain C57BL/6J (ChrY(C57)) was substituted for that of A/J mice (ChrY(A)), cardiomyocytes from the resulting "chromosome substitution" C57BL/6J-chrY(A )strain were smaller than that of their C57BL/6J counterparts. In reverse, when chrY(A )from A/J mice was substituted for that of chrY(C57), cardiomyocytes from the resulting A/J-chrY(C57 )strain were larger than in their A/J counterparts. We further used these strains to test whether: 1) the origin of chrY could also be linked to differences in the profile of gene expression in the hearts of adult male mice, and 2) post-pubertal testosterone could play a role in the differential morphologic and/or molecular effects of chrY(C57 )and chrY(A). RESULTS: The increased size of cardiomyocytes from adult male C57BL/6J mice compared to C57BL/6J-chrY(A )resulted from the absence of hypertrophic effects of post-pubertal testosterone on cells from the latter strain. However, gene profiling revealed that the latter effect could not be explained on the basis of an insensitivity of cells from C57BL/6J-chrY(A )to androgens, since even more cardiac genes were affected by post-pubertal testosterone in C57BL/6J-chrY(A )hearts than in C57BL/6J. By testing for interaction between the effects of surgery and strain, we identified 249 "interaction genes" whose expression was affected by post-pubertal testosterone differentially according to the genetic origin of chrY. These interaction genes were found to be enriched within a limited number of signaling pathways, including: 1) p53 signaling, which comprises the interacting genes Ccnd1, Pten and Cdkn1a that are also potential co-regulators of the androgen receptors, and 2) circadian rhythm, which comprises Arntl/Bmal1, which may in turn regulate cell growth via the control of Cdkn1a. CONCLUSION: Although post-pubertal testosterone increased the size of cardiomyocytes from male C56BL/6J mice but not that from their C57BL/6J-chrY(A )counterparts, it affected gene expression in the hearts from both strains. However, several cardiac genes responded to post-pubertal testosterone in a strict strain-selective manner, which provides possible mechanisms explaining how chrY may, in part via interference with androgen regulatory events, be linked to morphologic differences of cardiac cells of adult male mice. BioMed Central 2009-04-07 /pmc/articles/PMC2679052/ /pubmed/19351403 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-150 Text en Copyright © 2009 Llamas et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Llamas, Bastien
Verdugo, Ricardo A
Churchill, Gary A
Deschepper, Christian F
Chromosome Y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone
title Chromosome Y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone
title_full Chromosome Y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone
title_fullStr Chromosome Y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone
title_full_unstemmed Chromosome Y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone
title_short Chromosome Y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone
title_sort chromosome y variants from different inbred mouse strains are linked to differences in the morphologic and molecular responses of cardiac cells to postpubertal testosterone
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2679052/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19351403
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-150
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