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Estradiol and Progesterone Exhibit Similar Patterns of Hepatic Gene Expression Regulation in the Bovine Model

Female sex steroid hormones, estradiol-17β (E2-17β) and progesterone (P4) regulate reproductive function and gene expression in a broad range of tissues. Given the central role of the liver in regulating homeostasis including steroid hormone metabolism, we sought to understand how E2-17β and P4 inte...

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Autores principales: Piccinato, Carla A., Rosa, Guilherme J. M., N’Jai, Alhaji U., Jefcoate, Colin R., Wiltbank, Milo C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3775788/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24069207
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0073552
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author Piccinato, Carla A.
Rosa, Guilherme J. M.
N’Jai, Alhaji U.
Jefcoate, Colin R.
Wiltbank, Milo C.
author_facet Piccinato, Carla A.
Rosa, Guilherme J. M.
N’Jai, Alhaji U.
Jefcoate, Colin R.
Wiltbank, Milo C.
author_sort Piccinato, Carla A.
collection PubMed
description Female sex steroid hormones, estradiol-17β (E2-17β) and progesterone (P4) regulate reproductive function and gene expression in a broad range of tissues. Given the central role of the liver in regulating homeostasis including steroid hormone metabolism, we sought to understand how E2-17β and P4 interact to affect global gene expression in liver. Ovariectomized cows (n = 8) were randomly assigned to 4 treatment groups applied in a replicated Latin Square design: 1) No hormone supplementation, 2) E2-17β treatment (ear implant), 3) P4 treatment (intravaginal inserts), and 4) E2-17β combined with P4. After 14 d of treatment, liver biopsies were collected, allowing 28 d intervals between periods. Changes in gene expression in the liver biopsies were monitored using bovine-specific arrays. Treatment with E2-17β altered expression of 479 genes, P4 472 genes, and combined treatment significantly altered expression of 468 genes. In total, 578 genes exhibited altered expression including a remarkable number (346 genes) that responded similarly to E2-17β, P4, or combined treatment. Additional evidence for similar gene expression actions of E2-17ß and/or P4 were: principal component analysis placed almost every treatment array at a substantial distance from controls; Venn diagrams indicated overall treatment effects for most regulated genes; clustering analysis indicated the two major clusters had all treatments up-regulating (172 genes) or down-regulating (173 genes) expression. Thus, unexpectedly, common biological pathways were regulated by E2-17β and/or P4 in liver. This indicates that the mechanism of action of these steroid hormones in the liver might be either indirect or might occur through non-genomic pathways. This unusual pattern of gene expression in response to steroid hormones is consistent with the idea that there are classical and non-classical tissue-specific responses to steroid hormone actions. Future studies are needed to elucidate putative mechanism(s) responsible for overlapping actions of E2-17β and P4 on the liver transcriptome.
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spelling pubmed-37757882013-09-25 Estradiol and Progesterone Exhibit Similar Patterns of Hepatic Gene Expression Regulation in the Bovine Model Piccinato, Carla A. Rosa, Guilherme J. M. N’Jai, Alhaji U. Jefcoate, Colin R. Wiltbank, Milo C. PLoS One Research Article Female sex steroid hormones, estradiol-17β (E2-17β) and progesterone (P4) regulate reproductive function and gene expression in a broad range of tissues. Given the central role of the liver in regulating homeostasis including steroid hormone metabolism, we sought to understand how E2-17β and P4 interact to affect global gene expression in liver. Ovariectomized cows (n = 8) were randomly assigned to 4 treatment groups applied in a replicated Latin Square design: 1) No hormone supplementation, 2) E2-17β treatment (ear implant), 3) P4 treatment (intravaginal inserts), and 4) E2-17β combined with P4. After 14 d of treatment, liver biopsies were collected, allowing 28 d intervals between periods. Changes in gene expression in the liver biopsies were monitored using bovine-specific arrays. Treatment with E2-17β altered expression of 479 genes, P4 472 genes, and combined treatment significantly altered expression of 468 genes. In total, 578 genes exhibited altered expression including a remarkable number (346 genes) that responded similarly to E2-17β, P4, or combined treatment. Additional evidence for similar gene expression actions of E2-17ß and/or P4 were: principal component analysis placed almost every treatment array at a substantial distance from controls; Venn diagrams indicated overall treatment effects for most regulated genes; clustering analysis indicated the two major clusters had all treatments up-regulating (172 genes) or down-regulating (173 genes) expression. Thus, unexpectedly, common biological pathways were regulated by E2-17β and/or P4 in liver. This indicates that the mechanism of action of these steroid hormones in the liver might be either indirect or might occur through non-genomic pathways. This unusual pattern of gene expression in response to steroid hormones is consistent with the idea that there are classical and non-classical tissue-specific responses to steroid hormone actions. Future studies are needed to elucidate putative mechanism(s) responsible for overlapping actions of E2-17β and P4 on the liver transcriptome. Public Library of Science 2013-09-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3775788/ /pubmed/24069207 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0073552 Text en © 2013 Piccinato et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Piccinato, Carla A.
Rosa, Guilherme J. M.
N’Jai, Alhaji U.
Jefcoate, Colin R.
Wiltbank, Milo C.
Estradiol and Progesterone Exhibit Similar Patterns of Hepatic Gene Expression Regulation in the Bovine Model
title Estradiol and Progesterone Exhibit Similar Patterns of Hepatic Gene Expression Regulation in the Bovine Model
title_full Estradiol and Progesterone Exhibit Similar Patterns of Hepatic Gene Expression Regulation in the Bovine Model
title_fullStr Estradiol and Progesterone Exhibit Similar Patterns of Hepatic Gene Expression Regulation in the Bovine Model
title_full_unstemmed Estradiol and Progesterone Exhibit Similar Patterns of Hepatic Gene Expression Regulation in the Bovine Model
title_short Estradiol and Progesterone Exhibit Similar Patterns of Hepatic Gene Expression Regulation in the Bovine Model
title_sort estradiol and progesterone exhibit similar patterns of hepatic gene expression regulation in the bovine model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3775788/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24069207
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0073552
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