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Ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function

Oestrogens are pivotal in ovarian follicular growth, development and function, with fundamental roles in steroidogenesis, nurturing the oocyte and ovulation. Infections with bacteria such as Escherichia coli cause infertility in mammals at least in part by perturbing ovarian follicle function, chara...

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Autores principales: Herath, Shan, Williams, Erin J, Lilly, Sonia T, Gilbert, Robert O, Dobson, Hilary, Bryant, Clare E, Sheldon, I Martin
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioScientifica 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2735812/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17965259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/REP-07-0229
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author Herath, Shan
Williams, Erin J
Lilly, Sonia T
Gilbert, Robert O
Dobson, Hilary
Bryant, Clare E
Sheldon, I Martin
author_facet Herath, Shan
Williams, Erin J
Lilly, Sonia T
Gilbert, Robert O
Dobson, Hilary
Bryant, Clare E
Sheldon, I Martin
author_sort Herath, Shan
collection PubMed
description Oestrogens are pivotal in ovarian follicular growth, development and function, with fundamental roles in steroidogenesis, nurturing the oocyte and ovulation. Infections with bacteria such as Escherichia coli cause infertility in mammals at least in part by perturbing ovarian follicle function, characterised by suppression of oestradiol production. Ovarian follicle granulosa cells produce oestradiol by aromatisation of androstenedione from the theca cells, under the regulation of gonadotrophins such as FSH. Many of the effects of E. coli are mediated by its surface molecule lipopolysaccharide (LPS) binding to the Toll-like receptor-4 (TLR4), CD14, MD-2 receptor complex on immune cells, but immune cells are not present inside ovarian follicles. The present study tested the hypothesis that granulosa cells express the TLR4 complex and LPS directly perturbs their secretion of oestradiol. Granulosa cells from recruited or dominant follicles are exposed to LPS in vivo and when they were cultured in the absence of immune cell contamination in vitro they produced less oestradiol when challenged with LPS, although theca cell androstenedione production was unchanged. The suppression of oestradiol production by LPS was associated with down-regulation of transcripts for aromatase in granulosa cells, and did not affect cell survival. Furthermore, these cells expressed TLR4, CD14 and MD-2 transcripts throughout the key stages of follicle growth and development. It appears that granulosa cells have an immune capability to detect bacterial infection, which perturbs follicle steroidogenesis, and this is a likely mechanism by which ovarian follicle growth and function is perturbed during bacterial infection.
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spelling pubmed-27358122009-09-01 Ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function Herath, Shan Williams, Erin J Lilly, Sonia T Gilbert, Robert O Dobson, Hilary Bryant, Clare E Sheldon, I Martin Reproduction Research Oestrogens are pivotal in ovarian follicular growth, development and function, with fundamental roles in steroidogenesis, nurturing the oocyte and ovulation. Infections with bacteria such as Escherichia coli cause infertility in mammals at least in part by perturbing ovarian follicle function, characterised by suppression of oestradiol production. Ovarian follicle granulosa cells produce oestradiol by aromatisation of androstenedione from the theca cells, under the regulation of gonadotrophins such as FSH. Many of the effects of E. coli are mediated by its surface molecule lipopolysaccharide (LPS) binding to the Toll-like receptor-4 (TLR4), CD14, MD-2 receptor complex on immune cells, but immune cells are not present inside ovarian follicles. The present study tested the hypothesis that granulosa cells express the TLR4 complex and LPS directly perturbs their secretion of oestradiol. Granulosa cells from recruited or dominant follicles are exposed to LPS in vivo and when they were cultured in the absence of immune cell contamination in vitro they produced less oestradiol when challenged with LPS, although theca cell androstenedione production was unchanged. The suppression of oestradiol production by LPS was associated with down-regulation of transcripts for aromatase in granulosa cells, and did not affect cell survival. Furthermore, these cells expressed TLR4, CD14 and MD-2 transcripts throughout the key stages of follicle growth and development. It appears that granulosa cells have an immune capability to detect bacterial infection, which perturbs follicle steroidogenesis, and this is a likely mechanism by which ovarian follicle growth and function is perturbed during bacterial infection. BioScientifica 2007-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2735812/ /pubmed/17965259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/REP-07-0229 Text en © 2007 Society for Reproduction and Fertility http://www.bioscientifica.com/journals/reuselicencerep/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Society for Reproduction and Fertility's Re-use Licence (http://www.bioscientifica.com/journals/reuselicencerep/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is roperly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Herath, Shan
Williams, Erin J
Lilly, Sonia T
Gilbert, Robert O
Dobson, Hilary
Bryant, Clare E
Sheldon, I Martin
Ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function
title Ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function
title_full Ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function
title_fullStr Ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function
title_full_unstemmed Ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function
title_short Ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function
title_sort ovarian follicular cells have innate immune capabilities that modulate their endocrine function
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2735812/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17965259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/REP-07-0229
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