Cargando…

Use of a prolactin-Cre/ROSA-YFP transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation

In rats, a shift from somatotroph dominance to lactotroph dominance during pregnancy and lactation is well reported. Somatotroph to lactotroph transdifferentiation and increased lactotroph mitotic activity are believed to account for this and associated pituitary hypertrophy. A combination of cell d...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Castrique, Emma, Fernandez-Fuente, Marta, Le Tissier, Paul, Herman, Andy, Levy, Andy
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioScientifica 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2837375/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20139144
http://dx.doi.org/10.1677/JOE-09-0414
_version_ 1782178809963872256
author Castrique, Emma
Fernandez-Fuente, Marta
Le Tissier, Paul
Herman, Andy
Levy, Andy
author_facet Castrique, Emma
Fernandez-Fuente, Marta
Le Tissier, Paul
Herman, Andy
Levy, Andy
author_sort Castrique, Emma
collection PubMed
description In rats, a shift from somatotroph dominance to lactotroph dominance during pregnancy and lactation is well reported. Somatotroph to lactotroph transdifferentiation and increased lactotroph mitotic activity are believed to account for this and associated pituitary hypertrophy. A combination of cell death and transdifferentiation away from the lactotroph phenotype has been reported to restore non-pregnant pituitary proportions after weaning. To attempt to confirm that a similar process occurs in mice, we generated and used a transgenic reporter mouse model (prolactin (PRL)-Cre/ROSA26-expression of yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP)) in which PRL promoter activity at any time resulted in permanent, stable, and highly specific EYFP. Triple immunochemistry for GH, PRL, and EYFP was used to quantify EYFP+ve, PRL−ve, and GH+ve cell populations during pregnancy and lactation, and for up to 3 weeks after weaning, and concurrent changes in cell size were estimated. At all stages, the EYFP reporter was expressed in 80% of the lactotrophs, but in fewer than 1% of other pituitary cell types, indicating that transdifferentiation from those lactotrophs where reporter expression was activated is extremely rare. Contrary to expectations, no increase in the lactotroph/somatotroph ratio was seen during pregnancy and lactation, whether assessed by immunochemistry for the reporter or PRL: findings confirmed by PRL immunochemistry in non-transgenic mice. Mammosomatotrophs were rarely encountered at the age group studied. Individual EYFP+ve cell volumes increased significantly by mid-lactation compared with virgin animals. This, in combination with a modest and non-cell type-specific estrogen-induced increase in mitotic activity, could account for pregnancy-induced changes in overall pituitary size.
format Text
id pubmed-2837375
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioScientifica
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-28373752010-04-01 Use of a prolactin-Cre/ROSA-YFP transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation Castrique, Emma Fernandez-Fuente, Marta Le Tissier, Paul Herman, Andy Levy, Andy J Endocrinol Regular Papers In rats, a shift from somatotroph dominance to lactotroph dominance during pregnancy and lactation is well reported. Somatotroph to lactotroph transdifferentiation and increased lactotroph mitotic activity are believed to account for this and associated pituitary hypertrophy. A combination of cell death and transdifferentiation away from the lactotroph phenotype has been reported to restore non-pregnant pituitary proportions after weaning. To attempt to confirm that a similar process occurs in mice, we generated and used a transgenic reporter mouse model (prolactin (PRL)-Cre/ROSA26-expression of yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP)) in which PRL promoter activity at any time resulted in permanent, stable, and highly specific EYFP. Triple immunochemistry for GH, PRL, and EYFP was used to quantify EYFP+ve, PRL−ve, and GH+ve cell populations during pregnancy and lactation, and for up to 3 weeks after weaning, and concurrent changes in cell size were estimated. At all stages, the EYFP reporter was expressed in 80% of the lactotrophs, but in fewer than 1% of other pituitary cell types, indicating that transdifferentiation from those lactotrophs where reporter expression was activated is extremely rare. Contrary to expectations, no increase in the lactotroph/somatotroph ratio was seen during pregnancy and lactation, whether assessed by immunochemistry for the reporter or PRL: findings confirmed by PRL immunochemistry in non-transgenic mice. Mammosomatotrophs were rarely encountered at the age group studied. Individual EYFP+ve cell volumes increased significantly by mid-lactation compared with virgin animals. This, in combination with a modest and non-cell type-specific estrogen-induced increase in mitotic activity, could account for pregnancy-induced changes in overall pituitary size. BioScientifica 2010-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2837375/ /pubmed/20139144 http://dx.doi.org/10.1677/JOE-09-0414 Text en © 2010 Society for Endocrinology http://www.endocrinology.org/journals/reuselicence/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Society for Endocrinology's Re-use Licence (http://www.endocrinology.org/journals/reuselicence/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Regular Papers
Castrique, Emma
Fernandez-Fuente, Marta
Le Tissier, Paul
Herman, Andy
Levy, Andy
Use of a prolactin-Cre/ROSA-YFP transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation
title Use of a prolactin-Cre/ROSA-YFP transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation
title_full Use of a prolactin-Cre/ROSA-YFP transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation
title_fullStr Use of a prolactin-Cre/ROSA-YFP transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation
title_full_unstemmed Use of a prolactin-Cre/ROSA-YFP transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation
title_short Use of a prolactin-Cre/ROSA-YFP transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation
title_sort use of a prolactin-cre/rosa-yfp transgenic mouse provides no evidence for lactotroph transdifferentiation after weaning, or increase in lactotroph/somatotroph proportion in lactation
topic Regular Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2837375/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20139144
http://dx.doi.org/10.1677/JOE-09-0414
work_keys_str_mv AT castriqueemma useofaprolactincrerosayfptransgenicmouseprovidesnoevidenceforlactotrophtransdifferentiationafterweaningorincreaseinlactotrophsomatotrophproportioninlactation
AT fernandezfuentemarta useofaprolactincrerosayfptransgenicmouseprovidesnoevidenceforlactotrophtransdifferentiationafterweaningorincreaseinlactotrophsomatotrophproportioninlactation
AT letissierpaul useofaprolactincrerosayfptransgenicmouseprovidesnoevidenceforlactotrophtransdifferentiationafterweaningorincreaseinlactotrophsomatotrophproportioninlactation
AT hermanandy useofaprolactincrerosayfptransgenicmouseprovidesnoevidenceforlactotrophtransdifferentiationafterweaningorincreaseinlactotrophsomatotrophproportioninlactation
AT levyandy useofaprolactincrerosayfptransgenicmouseprovidesnoevidenceforlactotrophtransdifferentiationafterweaningorincreaseinlactotrophsomatotrophproportioninlactation