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Department of Neurobiology and Developmental Sciences College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Science, Little Rock, Arkansas 72205
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Gwen V. Childs, Ph.D., Professor and Chair, Department of Neurobiology and Developmental Sciences, College of Medicine, 4301 West Markham, University of Arkansas for Medical Science, Little Rock, Arkansas 72205. E-mail: childsgwenv{at}uams.edu.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Similar cyclic changes in GH expression have been reported for other species. In sheep, there are increases in serum GH and GH mRNA in the late follicular phase (6). A concomitant surge in GH also occurs at the time of the spontaneous or estradiol-induced LH surge in the ewe (7, 8). In ovariectomized or intact primates, estradiol stimulated increases in GH and IGF-1 (9, 10). Our laboratory reported a decline in expression of GH mRNA (detected by percentages of GH cells). The reduction reached a nadir at metestrus and was followed by a rise that peaked on the morning of diestrus and proestrus (11), coinciding with the expected rise in serum estrogen.
Most recently, a study of aromatase knockout female mice by Yan et al. (12) showed low expression of GHRH receptors, GH, and pit-1 mRNA. Estrogen replacement, in vivo, elevated mRNAs for GHRH receptors, pit-1, and GH 1.8-, 1.9-, and 1.6-fold, respectively. In contrast, Lam et al. (13) reported that injections of 25 µg/kg·d estrogen given to ovariectomized rats for 5 d, decreased both GH mRNA and GHRH receptor mRNA (10 d post surgery). Thus, whereas most evidence points to a coincident rise in estrogen and GH, this rise may depend on the physiological state of the animal as well as the concentration of estrogen.
A review of the literature indicates a similar lack of agreement about whether or not estrogen regulates GH cells at the level of the pituitary (14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19). Some reports show enhancing effects of estradiol on pituitary GH and GH secretion (15, 16) in vitro. However, others have found no enhancing effects on GH (17), or mixed effects, depending on the environment (10, 14, 18, 19). Our previous studies showed bipotential effects of estrogen on GnRH receptors that were dose dependent and also dependent on the stage of the cycle being studied (20). We hypothesized that the differences in the reports may be partly due to the varying concentrations of estrogen used in the studies.
The objective of these studies was to determine whether estrogen had an enhancing effect on the expression of GH mRNA, antigens, or binding for GHRH, in vitro. This report presents the results of these studies showing that low concentrations of estrogen are stimulatory, but higher concentrations are not. Thus, some of the discordant results in the literature may reflect the concentrations used by a given study.
| Materials and Methods |
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The rats were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital within a few minutes of removal from their cage. When they were fully asleep, they were killed with a guillotine, and the pituitary was rapidly removed and placed in DMEM containing 0.1% BSA. The protocol was approved annually by the Animal Care and Use committee because it was conducted in accordance with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, 1996, National Academy of Science.
The dissociation protocol has been described previously (11, 24, 25, 26, 27). After plating for 1 h on poly-D-lysine-coated coverslips in 24-well trays, the cells were grown for 1518 h in DMEM supplemented with transferrin, insulin, and sodium selenite (made from a 10x stock solution; Sigma, St. Louis, MO).
Estrogen treatment
A full-dose range was used, with the water soluble, tissue grade 17ß-estradiol from Sigma. The compound could be dissolved directly in the DMEM plus supplements (insulin, transferrin, BSA, and sodium selenite), which served as the vehicle control in pilot studies, we tested different times of estrogen treatment of up to 48 h. We found no significant changes with times in culture ranging from 15 h (overnight) to 48 h. Most of the following experiments used 24 h; however, estrogen was also an effective stimulator of GHRH-receptive cells in 1518 h.
Immunolabeling protocols for GH antigens
Labeling for GH was initially done with 1:110,0001:126,000 dilution of antirat GH (Hormone Distribution Office, National Institutes of Health) and the Dako (Carpinteria, CA) rapid kit with includes biotinylated antirabbit IgG and streptavidin peroxidase (25). All percentages graphed in the dose-response curves reported in this study are from counts made of fields labeled with this single labeling protocols, with nickel-intensified diaminobenzidine as the peroxidase substrate (11, 24, 25, 26, 27). In absorption controls, anti-GH was absorbed with 10100 ng/ml GH in either single or dual labeling protocols and the labeling was abolished. Omitting the anti-GH or the antirabbit IgG resulted in no labeling.
After most of the study was completed, a new protocol for immunolabeling was developed to detect cells that coexpress GHRH receptors and GH antigens with the use of the ImmPRESS peroxidase micropolymer linked to antirabbit IgG (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). This protocol required 1:183,0001:200,500 dilutions of antirat GH. It will be described in the last section of this presentation, which focuses on biotinylated GHRH.
Protocol for the detection of GH mRNA
For the in situ hybridization, the cells were fixed for 30 min in 2% glutaraldehyde, followed by four 15-min washes in phosphate buffer containing 4.5% sucrose. The protocol has been described previously (11, 24, 28, 29). The antisense and sense oligonucleotide probes for GH mRNA were made by http://www.GeneDetect.com. The antisense probe hybridizes against nucleotides 64101 of the rat GH gene mRNA (GenBank accession no. U62779). This probe was conjugated to biotin with GreenStar technology that produces a high yield of labeled probes with at least 10 reporter molecules/probe (http://www.GeneDetect.com). This biotin-labeled antisense probe for GH mRNA produced labeling in 2430% of AP cells in control diestrous or proestrous fields, values that were comparable to those reported previously (11). Optimal dilutions of this probe initially were 810 ng/ml.
Controls included fields exposed to biotin-labeled probes for the sense sequence of GH mRNA, or fields exposed to the vehicle instead of the biotinylated antisense sequence. In addition, excess unlabeled probe was added with the labeled probe. Fields showed that the unlabeled probe competed successfully for mRNA sites and abolished labeling if added in an excess of 80 x the labeled probe. These controls are illustrated in Fig. 1
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rollin/stats/ssize/n2.html). Each of the three experiments produced three coverslips bearing cells exposed to a given concentration of estradiol. Before the image analysis program was applied, 18 high-resolution (1600 x 2400) images/experimental group (equally sampling all nine coverslips and the three experiments) were digitized with the use of a SPOT camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI), the x40 objective, and the same lighting and condenser settings. The fields were chosen systematically and included two fields near the center of the culture, and one in each of four quadrants to the upper and lower left and right of center. The camera field display in the microscope oculars was used to prevent overlap of fields. An entire group of experiments was photographed in the same time period, with identical settings.
The BioQuant NovaPrime Image analysis system (Nashville, TN) designed for use with Windows XP was used to detect area and integrated OD of label on these photographs. After a uniform background reading was taken from a blank area in the field, two threshold levels were set. The first threshold detected all cells by their density, including the labeled cells. The second detected only the label. A macro was designed to calculate the percentage of total area assayed that contained label. Limitations in a size threshold automatically excluded readings from debris or red blood cells. The BioQuant NovaPrime also calculated integrated OD measurements for the label that integrated the density of the pixels that detected label x the area covered by the label. The formula used by the system uses the "sum of the negative log 10 of the intensity of the foreground pixels divided by the intensity of the background pixels" (BioQuant users manual). It is often used to compare intensity as well as size in micrometers.
To actually do the measurements, each photograph was visualized at high resolution and two to three nonoverlapping regions per photograph were delineated by topography. Thus, from the 18 photographs per dose per experimental group, at least 36 groups of cells were measured. The area measurements allowed us to monitor the total cell areas measured. There was a tendency toward an increase in total cells assayed (based on an increase in plating density in fields treated with 10 or 100 pM estradiol). However, when the total cell areas measured at each dose were averaged (n = 3 experiments), the differences between the concentrations were not significant. Also important is the fact that cultures treated with the highest concentrations of estradiol (100 and 250 nM) remained as well populated as those treated with vehicle alone. Thus, the analysis of cell areas showed that any gains or losses in label area were not due to overall changes in cell area.
Detection of GHRH-receptive cells with a biotinylated analog
The biotinylated ligand detection system has been used since 1983 (26, 27), and the protocol for biotinylated GHRH has been validated previously (25). Biotinylated GHRH is detected only after binding to living, physiologically active cells. Tests of the ligand have shown that optimal labeling of all cells (saturation of binding sites) is seen after 10 min in 1 nM of biotinylated GHRH, which is biologically active (25). Tests of specificity (25) have demonstrated that omission of the biotinylated GHRH prevented labeling for the ligand in either single or dual-labeling protocol. Unlabeled GHRH, GnRH or CRH were used to compete with biotinylated GHRH for tissue receptors. One hundred-fold excess of unlabeled GHRH successfully blocked binding sites and reduced labeling. CRH or GnRH had no blocking effects on the labeling for the biotinylated GHRH (25). Tests also showed that the biotinylated analog was potent in that it stimulated the release of GH (25).
To detect the hormone content of the GHRH target cells, a new dual immunolabeling protocol for GH was run with the use of the ImmPRESS reagent (Vector Laboratories) containing peroxidase-labeled horse antirabbit IgG. This system relies on a novel method of polymerizing the reporter enzyme and then attaching the polymer to a secondary antibody. It thus creates a micropolymer that is more accessible to tissue and results in lower background labeling than with other enzyme complexes. Our tests of labeling for GH showed optimal labeling with ImmPRESS with antibody dilutions in the range of 1:183,0001:200,500. This protocol also has the advantage that it does not react with any reactive avidin or biotin sites that might remain from the ABC (avidin-biotin complex; Vector Laboratories) detection system used for the biotinylated GHRH.
For the dual labeling, detection of the biotinylated GHRH (bio-GHRH) requires fixation, 3- to 5-min treatment in 0.3% hydrogen peroxide and treatment with the same blocking reagent to be used in the ImmPRESS reaction at the end of the protocol (10 mM phosphate buffer containing 2.5% normal horse serum; this comes with the ImmPRESS kit components). This new ABC-ImmPRESS dual labeling protocol was applied to cells from three groups of diestrous rats, treated with 0.01, 0.1, and 1 nM estrogen for 24 h. After treatment with biotinylated GHRH and fixation, the biotinylated GHRH binding sites are then detected with ABC elite peroxidase system (Vector Laboratories) according to kit instructions (25). After detection of the ABC peroxidase is completed with the use of nickel-intensified (blue-black) diaminobenzidine, the cells are washed in phosphate buffer and moved to the blocking solution again (10 mM phosphate and 2.5% normal horse serum) for 20 min. The blocking solution is then replaced with antirat GH serum diluted 1:200, 500 in the same blocking solution. The cells are incubated for 30 min at 37 C. They are then washed three times in phosphate buffer, and the ImmPRESS solution is applied (220250 µl or five drops/well), at room temperature for 20 min. The cells are then washed in phosphate buffer (three changes), and the peroxidase is detected by amber diaminobenzidine (25, 26, 27). After washing, they are dehydrated and mounted on slides (a coverslip is placed over the round coverslip, cell side up). Controls involved the omission of the primary antibody, omission of the ImmPRESS solution, or absorption of the primary antibody with 10100 ng/ml rat GH. The absorption controls showed complete neutralization of labeling with 10 or 100 ng GH per milliliter of diluted antibody. Figure 2
illustrates the immunoabsorption controls.
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| Results |
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Further analysis of these two data sets then showed that values for GH antigens or mRNA were similar after exposure to concentrations less than 0.01 nM, or greater than 1 nM. However, exposure to 0.1 and 1 nM estradiol resulted in significantly more GH cells detected by immunolabeling than detected by in situ hybridization (P = 0.017 for 0.1 nM and P = 0.016 for 1 nM).
Image analysis was therefore conducted on the fields labeled for GH mRNA to learn whether there were increases in density of label for mRNA per cell, which would support the enhanced expression of GH proteins. Estrogen (0.1 and 1 nM) stimulation caused significant increases in label area and/or density (P < 0.003). Figure 4
graphs the percentage of cell areas that contained label, and Fig. 5
graphs the changes in average integrated OD. Also shown in Fig. 4
are significant decreases in the percentage of cell areas that contained label in fields exposed to 100 or 250 nM estrogen (P < 0.001).
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When we analyzed the dual labeling for the populations described in Fig. 8
, 90 ± 4% of GHRH target cells contained GH and more than 98% of GH cells bound the biotinylated analog. These values are similar to those reported previously (25). Although 96 ± 5% of GHRH target cells contained GH after estrogen treatment, the difference between the control and estrogen-treated groups was not significant.
Figure 10
illustrates the dual labeling for biotinylated GHRH and the new ImmPRESS reagents, for GH. Figure 10
, A, D, and F, compares low magnification views of fields treated with vehicle (Fig 10A
) with fields treated with 0.1 and 1 nM estrogen (Fig 10
, B and C, respectively). There are more densely labeled cells in the estrogen-treated cultures. The higher magnifications show the resolution of the labeling for GHRH binding sites as patches at the cell periphery, or sometimes linear arrays in one region. This is typical of labeling for these ligands after 10 min of exposure. The orange labeling for GH fills the cell and is identical with the pattern seen with the Dako streptavidin kit (25).
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| Discussion |
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To learn more about potential stimulatory actions of estrogen on pituitary GH, we tested a full-dose range. We wanted to learn whether some of the controversy was due to well-known bipotential effects of estrogen seen in other systems (20, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35). Our results demonstrated that, after in vitro exposure to relatively low concentrations (<0.1 nM) of estrogen, there are increases in the percentages of pituitary cells that express GH antigens, mRNA, or GHRH receptors. Furthermore, the image analyses detected low, concentration-dependent increases in density of label integrated with an expansion in the area of label. Concentrations higher than 10 nM failed to stimulate an increase if applied over a 24-h period. This bipotential effect of estrogen may explain some of the lack of agreement, as will be discussed below.
The previous studies showing an estrogen-mediated effect were focused on secretory responses as end point assays. The present studies are the first to report the fact that estrogens cause a change in numbers of GH cells. Webb et al. (14) reported that 100 pM to 10 nM estradiol given for 4 d increased basal rat pituitary GH, in vitro, but not the somatotrope secretory responses to GHRH. In contrast, Simard et al. (15) reported that 10250 pM of 17ß-estradiol, estrone, and estriol stimulated both basal and GHRH-stimulated GH secretion in female rats, effects that were blocked by the antiestrogen L156758. A 72-h pretreatment with estradiol also stimulated synthesis of GH to 50% above control levels. Tulipano et al. (16) reported that an estrogen receptor modulator LY117018 stimulated GH secretion in rat pituitary cultures. Whereas the incubation period was shorter, the correlative findings in the present study show that 0.011 nM estradiol increased the number of somatotropes that express GH proteins and mRNA and GHRH receptors, thus correlating well with the changes in responsiveness observed by others (14, 15, 16).
Previous in vivo studies have not agreed about estrogens enhancement of GHRH receptor mRNA (12, 13). Yan et al. (12) reported that estrogen treatment of aromatase knockout mice increased GHRH receptor gene expression in anterior pituitaries. In contrast, Lam et al. (13) showed that 25 µg/kg estradiol inhibited expression of GHRH receptor mRNA in ovariectomized mice. The difference may be due to the animal model or the concentration of estrogen. The present studies support the work of Yan et al. (12). In addition, new findings in this study show that the changes in cells bearing GHRH binding sites mirror those of GH mRNA or proteins in two ways. First, differential counts show a decline in biotinylated GHRH target cells during metestrus that correlates well with the decline in GH mRNA-bearing cells (11). Second, estrogen exposure to cells from estrous, metestrous, and diestrous animals increases the percentage of GHRH target cells. The dual labeling shows that over 90% of these cells store GH. Thus, the cytochemical evidence points to the fact that estrogen stimulation brings about an increase in GH cells that appear fully competent. We base this argument on previous studies that demonstrated the biological potency of biotinylated GHRH as well as the fact that the ligand can only be detected with living, healthy cells (25).
Those workers that used higher concentrations of estrogens reported no stimulatory effects on GH secretory activity. Fukuta and Martin (17) reported that, in rat AP cultures, 24 h in 100 nM 17ß-estradiol had no effect on GHRH-induced GH release. The present studies report new information showing that 100 nM estrogen does not stimulate more cells with GH mRNA or antigens. In fact, the densitometric analysis shows a significant reduction in area of label for GH mRNA after exposure to 100 nM.
In addition, our present studies show that 10 nM estradiol did not stimulate more cells with GH mRNA. This agrees with studies of bovine pituitary cultures by Silverman et al. (18), who reported that a 72-h pretreatment with 10 nM estradiol increased the GH secretory response to 0.110 nM GHRH, but not the levels of GH mRNA.
Mixed or negative findings were reported by a third group of studies that used longer term treatment periods. Bethea reported no changes in media GH in pituitary cultures obtained from spayed, intact adult, or juvenile female rhesus monkeys after 18 d treatment, in vivo, with 1 pM to 10 nM 17ß-estradiol (10). Our studies were limited to 24 h, and it is possible that the longer term effects of even low concentrations of estrogen treatment, in vivo, would have a different outcome on the overall population, especially because estrogen is important in the conversion of somatomammotropes to mammotropes (36, 37, 38, 39).
Another example of a study of long-term treatment, in vitro, was published by Hauspie et al. (19). This group reported a negative effect of 10 nM estradiol on percentages of monohormonal GH cells in long-term cultures (4 wk). However, this same concentration of estradiol prevented the decline in the subset of GH cells that were multihormonal. Whereas we agree that 10 nM is not a strong stimulatory concentration, its capacity to maintain a subset of multihormonal GH cells may provide important clues about estrogen effects on differentiation.
Thus, our studies expand and clarify the reports about direct estrogen actions on pituitary GH secretion. In some cases, the differences can be explained by the concentration of estradiol used. Other differences can be explained by the species or their physiological state.
In addition to reporting changes in GH cell percentages, new findings in the present studies include the fact that the magnitude of the changes in percentages of cells with GH mRNA was not as great as that with GH antigens. This result is comparable with our previous findings (11) in which we showed that the percentages of cells with GH mRNA and GH antigens are similar for all experimental groups tested except the metestrous rat AP population. During metestrus, there is a significant decrease in GH mRNA [detected by both in situ hybridization and ribonuclease protection assays (11)] accompanied by only a slight decline in cells with GH antigens. This agrees with previous studies from Frawleys laboratory (36, 37) in which they show no differences in GH secretory capacity in a reverse hemolytic plaque assay with the stage of the estrous cycle. Thus, the lower expression of transcripts at metestrus indicates differential regulation of transcripts vs. proteins in somatotropes.
In the present studies, after exposure to 110 nM estradiol, percentages of cells with GH antigens continue to rise to between 40 and 45% (a 1.6-fold increase over basal), whereas there are no further increases in cells with GH mRNA. It is possible that higher concentrations of estrogen may down-regulate synthesis of GH mRNA either directly, or indirectly by increasing GH antigens available for negative short-loop feedback (40, 41). Other causes may relate to differential effects of estrogen on transcription vs. translation in subsets of GH cells.
To summarize, the results of these studies have supported the hypothesis that the rise in serum GH (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10) and GH mRNA (11) during the cycle could be regulated by estradiol at the level of the pituitary. The controversy about estrogen effects reported in the literature can be explained, in part, on the basis of differences in concentration used. Estrogen-enhancing effects are seen in a relatively narrow range of concentrations. These bipotential effects add information to a body of literature describing similar actions of estrogen in other organs and organ systems (30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35).
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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First Published Online December 23, 2004
Abbreviations: ABC, Avidin-biotin complex; AP, anterior pituitary; LSD, least significant differences.
Received August 23, 2004.
Accepted for publication December 13, 2004.
| References |
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-Subunit genes by gonadotropin-releasing hormone and estradiol-17ß in single rat pituitary cells during aggregate cell culture. Endocrinology 144:388399
and ß by gonadotropes during the estrous cycle. J Histochem Cytochem 49:665666This article has been cited by other articles:
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