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*Compound via MeSH
*Substance via MeSH
Hazardous Substances DB
*CHOLESTEROL
*CHORIONIC GONADOTROPIN
*TESTOSTERONE
Endocrinology Vol. 142, No. 6 2509-2520
Copyright © 2001 by The Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Leukemia Inhibitory Factor Antagonizes Gonadotropin Induced-Testosterone Synthesis in Cultured Porcine Leydig Cells: Sites of Action1

Claire Mauduit, Isabelle Goddard, Valérie Besset, Eric Tabone, Catherine Rey, Françoise Gasnier, Françoise Dacheux and Mohamed Benahmed

INSERM U. 407, Communications Cellulaires en Biologie de la Reproduction (C.M., I.G., V.B., M.B.), and INSERM U. 189 (C.R., F.G.), Faculté de Médecine Lyon Sud, 69921 Oullins Cedex, France; URA INRA-CNRS 1291, PRMD, Nouzilly, France (F.D.)

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Dr. C. Mauduit, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U 407, Communications Cellulaires en Biologie de la Reproduction, Faculté de Médecine Lyon Sud, BP 12, 69921 Oullins Cedex, France. E-mail mauduit{at}lsgrisnl.univ-lyon1.fr

In the present report, the action of leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) on testicular steroid hormone formation was studied. For this purpose, the direct effects of LIF were evaluated on basal and human (h)CG-stimulated testosterone synthesis by cultured, purified Leydig cells isolated from porcine testes. LIF reduced (more than 60%) hCG-stimulated testosterone synthesis. This inhibitory effect was exerted in a dose- and time-dependent manner. The maximal and half-maximal effects were obtained with, respectively, 10 ng/ml (0.5 nM ) and 2.5 ng/ml (0.125 nM ) of LIF after a 48-h treatment of the Leydig cells. Such an effect of the cytokine was not a cytotoxic effect, because it was reversible and Leydig cells recovered most of their steroidogenic activity after the removal of LIF. Considering the sites of action of LIF in inhibiting gonadotropin-stimulated testosterone formation, it was shown that LIF significantly (P < 0.002) reduced, in a comparable range (about 60% decrease), testosterone synthesis stimulated with LH/hCG or with pharmacological agents that enhance cAMP levels (cholera toxin, forskolin, and PG E2), and testosterone synthesis stimulated with 8-bromo-cAMP. Such an observation indicates that the antigonadotropic action of the cytokine is exerted in a predominant manner at a step (or steps) located beyond cAMP formation. Furthermore, incubation of Leydig cells with 22R-hydroxycholesterol (5 µg/ml, 2 h), a cholesterol substrate derivative that does not need an assisted process to be delivered to the inner mitochondrial membrane, reversed most of the inhibitory effect of LIF on the steroid hormone formation. Such results indicate that LIF acts by reducing cholesterol substrate availability in the mitochondria. Consequently, LIF action was tested on steroidogenic acute regulatory protein and PBR (peripheral benzodiazepine receptor) shown to be potentially involved in such a cholesterol transfer. LIF reduced, in a dose- and time-dependent manner, LH/hCG-induced steroidogenic acute regulatory protein messenger RNA levels. The maximal inhibitory effect was obtained with 6.6 ng/ml of LIF after 48 h of treatment. In contrast, LIF had no effect on PBR messenger RNA expression or PBR binding. This inhibitory effect of LIF on Leydig cell steroidogenesis is probably exerted via an auto/paracrine action of the cytokine. Indeed, by immunohistochemistry, LIF and LIF receptor proteins were identified in Leydig and Sertoli cells but not in other testicular cell types, except for LIF receptor in spermatogonia. Furthermore, the presence of LIF and its receptor in Leydig cells at the neonatal and adult periods suggests that the inhibitory effect of LIF on androgen formation reported here probably occurs in both the fetal and the adult Leydig cell populations during testicular development.




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