| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
REVIEW |
Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA
Correspondence should be addressed to W H Walker; Email: walkerw{at}pitt.edu
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
and TGF-ß), insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF) and hormones that regulate the development of the male reproductive structures or feedback to regulate the hormonal signals affecting Sertoli cells (mullerian-inhibiting substance (MIS), and inhibin) (reviewed in Skinner 2005). The process of spermatogenesis is regulated by a complex interplay of endocrine and paracrine signals. The master control hormone is gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH), a decapeptide produced by specialized neurons in the hypothalamus. Pulsatile GnRH production signals gonadotroph cells in the anterior pituitary to produce follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) that then act on the testis to regulate spermatogenic potential. LH binds to receptors on the surface of Leydig cells in the testis and stimulates the production of testosterone, a steroid hormone that diffuses into the seminiferous tubules. Within the seminiferous tubules only Sertoli cells possess receptors for testosterone and FSH and thus these cells are the major targets of the ultimate hormonal signals that regulate spermatogenesis. In this review, we discuss the molecular mechanisms by which the FSH and testosterone signals that are required to support spermatogenesis are transduced and integrated in Sertoli cells.
| FSH signaling mechanisms |
|---|
|
|
|---|
subunit but have unique ß subunits that impart hormone specificity. FSH transmits its signals via the 75 kDa FSH receptor (675 amino acids). The FSH receptor is a G protein-coupled receptor that spans the membrane seven times with seven conserved alpha helixes (reviewed in Simoni et al. 1997, Heckert & Griswold 2002). The gene encoding the FSH receptor consists of 10 exons. The first 9 exons encode the extracellular domain and the last exon encodes the membrane-spanning region. The crystal structure of FSH bound to the hormone-binding domain of the FSH receptor has been solved to reveal that FSH and its receptor interact in a manner that resembles a handclasp. Ten parallel ß-strands of the receptor and additional loops just C-terminal to the ß stands surround and contact FSH. The receptor wraps around the middle section of the hormone, interacting with C-terminal segments and other loops of both the FSH-
and FSH-ß subunits. When FSH interacts with the receptor, the hormone undergoes a series of conformational adjustments and adopts a rigid structure that appears to be required for signaling. As a result of hormone binding to the ectodomain of the receptor, structural changes occur in the seven membrane-spanning domain that illicit guanine nucleotide exchange in associated Gs proteins. There is also evidence that ligand binding causes dimerization of plasma membrane FSH receptors through contacts that are limited to the cytoplasmic domains and that receptor dimerization contributes to signaling (Dias 2005, Fan & Hendrickson 2005).
Sertoli cell ontogeny and FSH signaling
During the last four days of gestation (fetal days 17.521.5), plasma FSH levels in rats increase nearly 2-fold to approximately 250 ng/ml at birth and then reach almost 400 ng/ml by 5 days of life. FSH levels in serum transiently peak at about 800 ng/ml by day 35 before reaching steady-state levels of 400 ng/ml in 50 day-old rats (Chowdhury & Steinberger 1976, Ketelslegers et al. 1978). Low levels of FSH receptor activity in rat gonads can be detected after 14.5 days of gestation but FSH binding activity increases about four-fold over fetal days 19.5 to 21.5 (Warren et al. 1984). This increase in FSH receptors is concurrent with increased Sertoli cell proliferation. It is not clear whether the proliferation is dependent upon increased FSH receptor levels or whether the increased number of Sertoli cells accounts for the elevated FSH (AA) and the activation of eicosanoids such as PGE2 that may act as intracellular or extracellular signaling agents. binding activity that is detected. Ketelslegers and colleagues assayed FSH binding activity in testis extracts after birth and determined that by 2 days of life FSH receptors are approximately 40 fmol/testis (Ketelslegers et al. 1978). FSH receptor numbers per testis then continually increase up to a plateau of 1000 fmol/testis 60 days after birth. Studies by Bortolussi et al. resulted in similar trends but receptor concentrations were found to be 3 to 10-fold lower (Bortolussi et al. 1990). Both groups observed that after birth the concentration of receptors in the testis increases about 3-fold, peaking at 15 days after birth after which receptor levels fall in the adult to levels approximately that of the 2 day-old Sertoli cell. These changes in concentration reflect the increase in FSH receptors due to Sertoli cell proliferation 2 to 15 days after birth and the subsequent dilution of Sertoli cells due to the expansion of germ cells (Orth 1984, Meachem et al. 1996). The number of FSH receptors per Sertoli cell actually remain relatively constant from 2 to 21 days after birth (15001900 receptors/cell) but increase by another 2-fold each by 40 days and again by 60 days after birth (Bortolussi et al. 1990).
Cyclical regulation of the FSH receptor in the adult
In the adult rat seminiferous tubules, spermatogenesis occurs in a cyclical fashion such that, within any one region of the tubule, spermatogonial stem cells divide approximately every 12 days. As a result, there are regular, defined associations of germ cells that develop and are replenished together in any one region. Each step of the development of the associated germ cells can be divided into stages that have defined physiological characteristics and cell associations (cell association stages IXIV in rats). One cyclical characteristic that has been characterized is FSH-mediated production of cAMP in Sertoli cells. In the adult rat and human, serum FSH levels remain relatively constant. However, the expression of FSH receptors on Sertoli cells varies more than threefold in a cyclical and stage-specific manner such that receptor levels are highest in stages XIIIII and minimal during stages VIIVIII (Heckert & Griswold 1991). The levels of FSH-induced cAMP production in Sertoli cells closely follows the levels of FSH receptor with highest levels of cAMP observed in stages XIVVI (Kangasniemi et al. 1990).
FSH and intracellular cAMP are important regulators of FSH receptor levels in cultured Sertoli cells and in vivo. FSH stimulation results in a transient down-regulation of FSH receptor expression 4 to 8 h after addition of the hormone. By 16 h, receptor mRNAs return to control values (Themmen et al. 1991, Maguire et al. 1997). The levels of FSH receptor are determined primarily by the activity of the FSH receptor gene promoter region. A major FSH-regulated element within the rat FSH receptor promoter is a regulatory motif matching the defined core sequence CANNTG called an E-box that is located 23 bp upstream of the transcription start site. This E-box was shown to bind the helix-loop-helix transcription factors USF-1 and USF-2 (upstream stimulatory factor 1 and 2); activators of genes that support differentiation (Heckert et al. 1998). Interestingly, FSH and cAMP were recently shown to induce the expression of the Id2 gene, a member of the inhibitor of differentiation family of gene regulators that repress E-box mediated transcription (Scobey et al. 2004). Overexpression of another Id protein (Id1) was shown to decrease FSH receptor promoter activity by up to 50% (Goetz et al. 1996). It remains to be determined whether FSH-mediated induction of Id proteins is responsible for the cyclical down-regulation of the FSH receptor gene.
FSH signal transduction pathways
FSH binding to its receptor is known to activate at least 5 signaling pathways in Sertoli cells (Fig. 1
). These pathways are discussed below.
|
and Gß
. The GTP bound form of the G
protein stimulates adenylate cyclase resulting in the production of cAMP (Zhang et al. 1991). Increased intracellular cAMP concentrations release the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A (PKA) from repressor subunits allowing phosphorylation of numerous cellular proteins. One target for the increase in cAMP and PKA is a class of transcription factors that bind to cAMP response elements (CREs). Specifically, the CRE binding protein (CREB) transcription factor is rapidly activated after being phosphorylated on serine 133 by PKA in response to FSH stimulation (Walker et al. 1995). The importance of CREB phosphorylation for fertility was identified using in vivo studies in which a mutant CREB isoform that could not be phosphorylated was over expressed exclusively in Sertoli cells in rat testes. Testes receiving the mutant CREB displayed disrupted spermatogenesis in greater than 40% of the seminiferous tubules due to the apoptosis of spermatocytes and subsequent loss of more than 75% of spermatids (Scobey et al. 2001). Once phosphorylated, CREB is able to activate transcription from the promoters of numerous genes. Two examples include the CREB gene promoter and an internal promoter within the highly homologous CREM gene that results in production of the inducible cAMP early repressor (ICER) repressor of CRE-mediated gene transcription (Molina et al. 1993, Walker et al. 1995). After being induced by CREB, ICER represses transcription from its own promoter and the CREB promoter (Molina et al. 1993, Walker et al. 1998). Transient down-regulation of CREB due to the expression of ICER prior to the auto-inhibition of ICER may explain the oscillating cAMP-mediated CREB mRNA expression that was observed in Sertoli cells during the spermatogenic cycle (Walker & Habener 1996). FSH has also been implicated in the expression of various isoforms of CREM that are expressed in spermatoctyes and spermatid germ cells and are required for survival (Foulkes et al. 1993, Nantel et al. 1996). However, this regulation of germ cell CREM by FSH must be indirectly mediated through as yet unidentified Sertoli cell factors.
MAP kinase pathway
The MAP kinase cascade and ERK kinases are activated by FSH in cultured rat Sertoli cells following the dual coupling of the FSH receptor to Gs and Gi heterotrimeric proteins. The activation of ERK kinase is dependent on PKA and Src kinases although the exact signaling pathway has not been characterized. FSH activates ERK kinase in Sertoli cells cultured from 5 and 11 day-old rats but not 19 day-old rats (Crepieux et al. 2001). Thus, this FSH-regulated pathway may not play a large role in maintaining spermatogenesis or other processes in adult rats. However, it is significant that the timing of FSH-mediated activation of the MAP kinase cascade is limited to the period of Sertoli cell proliferation that occurs in the first 15 days after birth because FSH stimulates Sertoli cell proliferation via this pathway. The FSH and ERK-dependent induction of cyclin D1 and E2F, two promoters of entry into the cell-cycle, also suggests that mitogenic effects of FSH are at least partly mediated by the MAP kinase cascade during puberty (Crepieux et al. 2001).
In contrast to cultured cells, Sertoli cells from 5 day-old rats placed into suspension had the opposite response to FSH. Under these conditions the gonadotropin repressed ERK activity via a cAMP dependent but PKA independent mechanism that required the activation of a tyrosine phosphatase (Crepieux et al. 2002). One clue toward understanding this mechanism for FSH-mediated inhibition of ERK activity in Sertoli cells has been provided by studies of granulosa cells that identified a 100 kDa tyrosine phosphatase that binds to and maintains lower basal levels of ERK kinase activity. In granulosa cells, ERK kinase activity is only activated after FSH-mediated phosphorylation of the phosphatase releases it from ERK (Cottom et al. 2003). It is possible that a similar tyrosine phosphatase may be utilized in Sertoli cells to limit the activation of ERK and downstream factors. Studies of granulosa cells also identified another MAP kinase, p38 kinase, as being induced by FSH, thus raising the possibility of p38 kinase regulation by FSH in Sertoli cells (Maizels et al. 1998).
Calcium pathway
FSH (101000 ng/ml) causes an increase in intracellular Ca2+ within seconds of stimulation (Grasso & Reichert 1989, Gorczynska & Handelsman 1991, Sharma et al. 1994, Lalevee et al. 1997). In freshly isolated Sertoli cells in suspension, FSH causes an influx of Ca2+ through the plasma membrane via both voltage gated and voltage independent calcium channels (Gorczynska & Handelsman 1991). Sertoli cells in culture for two days respond to FSH with Ca2+ release from intracellular stores that then cause Ca2+ influx due to calcium release-activated current (Lalevee et al. 1997). In both cases it is thought that FSH-mediated elevation of intracellular Ca2+ is predominately due to increases in cAMP, and that PKA may contribute to alter channel activity (Gorczynska et al. 1994, Sharma et al. 1994, Lalevee et al. 1997). One result of increasing intracellular Ca2+ is the activation of calmodulin and CaM kinases that may affect cytoskeletal structure of Sertoli cells and phosphorylation of transcription factors including CREB (Spruill et al. 1983, Franchi & Camatini 1985, Wu et al. 2001). In addition, Ca2+ likely plays an important role in SertoliSertoli junction dynamics, although most studies showing the importance of Ca2+ in tight junction dynamics have been performed in other cell types (Franchi & Camatini 1985, Mruk & Cheng 2004).
Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) pathway
FSH was first found in granulosa cells to activate phospha-tidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) that generates specific inositol phospholipids that are bound by and activate protein kinase B encoded by the akt gene (PKB/akt) (Gonzalez-Robayna et al. 2000). More recently, FSH was also found to activate PKB in a PI3-K-dependent manner in Sertoli cells (Meroni et al. 2002). The most favored mechanism for PI3-K activation is via FSH-mediated increases in cAMP levels. Using inhibitors of PI3-K, it was shown that FSH acting through PI3-K contributes to metabolic processes required to support germ cells. Specifically, PI3-K inhibitors reduced the ability of FSH to induce the activity of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) required to produce lactate for germ cells and
-glutamyl transpeptidase (
-GTP) a transporter of amino acids across the plasma membrane. Also dependent on PI3-K is the uptake of glucose that is converted to lactate for the germ cell energy needs and transferrin secretion that is vital for maintenance of spermatogenesis (Meroni et al. 2002). The seven membrane-spanning domain of the FSH receptor has been found to interact with the protein APPL (adapter protein containing PH domain, PTB domain and leucine zipper motif) that in turn interacts with the p110
catalytic subunit of PI3-K and with inactive PKB/akt (Nechamen et al. 2004). This juxtapositioning of signaling factors likely potentiates FSH activation of PI3-K mediated events.
Phospholipase A2 (PLA2) pathway
FSH through the activation of phospholipase A2 (PLA2) leads to the release of the arachadonic acid second messenger and its subsequent metabolism to prostoglandin E2 and other eicosanoids that function as intracellular and extracellular signals. As a result, adenylate cyclase activity and androgen aromatization are stimulated in Sertoli cells and germ cells may be affected via their G-protein coupled eicosanoid receptors (Jannini et al. 1994). Further studies will be required to better characterize the downstream factors that are affected by FSH activation of the PLA2 pathway.
Because FSH can activate at least 5 signaling pathways in Sertoli cells it might be expected that some crosstalk occurs to organize the final desired cellular consequences. Although potential crosstalk has not been extensively studied, it has been proposed that oligomerization of FSH receptors may provide a mechanism bringing together the components of multiple signaling pathways (PKA, PI3-K, PKB/akt and PLA2) to refine and control intracellular signaling (Nechamen et al. 2004). It should be noted that much of the valuable progress made toward characterizing FSH signaling has been performed with immature Sertoli cells. Further work will be necessary using fully differentiated Sertoli cells to understand the activation of these pathways and their roles in supporting spermatogenesis in adults.
Desensitization of the FSH receptor
Prolonged exposure of target cells to FSH results in a decreased response with time (desensitization). For example, a two-hour pretreatment with FSH reduces a subsequent FSH-mediated induction of cAMP production by 70% or more (Verhoeven et al. 1980, Troispoux et al. 1999). Desensitization can initiate within minutes of FSH binding to the FSH receptor. In this process, the receptor is phosphorylated on the first and third intracellular loops by G protein-coupled receptor kinases that allows arrestin proteins to bind to the intra-cellular domain of the receptor, thereby uncoupling the receptors from G proteins and preventing further signal transduction. Arrestins also facilitate internalization of receptors by interacting with clathrin and concentrating receptors in clathrin coated pits (Nakamura et al. 1998a, Nakamura et al. 1998b, Troispoux et al. 1999, Marion et al. 2002). With longer term exposure to FSH, Sertoli cells respond by up-regulating phosphodi-esterase activity to decrease cAMP levels (Conti et al. 1983) and by down-regulating FSH receptor expression (Themmen et al. 1991). When viewed together, the FSH-mediated activation of phosphodiesterase, the desensitization of the FSH receptor and down-regulation of the receptor as well as the stage-specific control over FSH receptor levels suggests that limiting the timing and duration of FSH signaling is important for Sertoli cell function. In support of this idea, a mouse transgenic model of constitutive FSH action displays elevated testosterone levels and is infertile (Kumar et al. 1999).
Regulation of gene expression by FSH
The multi-pronged signaling actions of FSH gene expression provide for extensive alterations in the expression of genes in Sertoli cells due to the activation of a number of transcription factors. In addition to the CRE binding factors mentioned previously, FSH stimulation results in translocation of NF-
B to the nucleus due to the release of NF-
B from its cytoplasmic anchoring partner I
B, most likely due to PKA phosphoylating I
B and marking it for degradation (Shirakawa & Mizel 1989, Ghosh & Baltimore 1990, Delfino & Walker 1998). FSH rapidly and transiently induces AP1 activity by stimulating the transcription of the AP1 components c-fos and jun-B while inhibiting c-jun (Hamil et al. 1994). The androgen receptor (AR) is also induced by FSH, thus FSH regulates the androgen responsiveness of Sertoli cells (Verhoven & Cailleau 1988, Blok et al. 1989, Sanborn et al. 1991, Blok et al. 1992). In granulosa cells, FSH induces LRH-1 (the orphan nuclear receptor liver homologue 1) (Saxena et al. 2004), and HIF-1 (hypoxia inducible factor 1) via the PI3-K pathway (Alam et al. 2004). The potential significance of FSH regulation of LRH-1 and HIF-1 has not yet been investigated in Sertoli cells.
A series of independent studies have identified FSH-inducible genes in Sertoli cells that have direct effects in supporting spermatogenesis. These genes include the FSH receptor (Maguire et al. 1997), double sex-and-mab 3 related transcription factor (Dmrt), which has been implicated in sex determination and testis differentiation (Chen & Heckert 2001), transferrin, which is required to transport iron to germ cells (Suire et al. 1995, Chaudhary & Skinner 1999), androgen binding protein which may play a role in regulating androgen activity in the testis (Morris et al. 1988) as well as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) (McLean et al. 2002) that may act on receptors present on germ cells from the spermatogonia to round spermatid stages of development (Nalbandian et al. 2003). FSH also up-regulates GDNF (glial cell line derived neurotrophic factor), a member of the TGF-ß superfamily that regulates the proliferation of germinal stem cells (Tadokoro et al. 2002). Additional genes known to be regulated by FSH-inducible cAMP and CREB include lactate dehydrogenase (LDH-A), that controls the synthesis of the major fuel source for germ cells (Short et al. 1994), stem cell factor (kit ligand) that potentiates the survival and expansion of spermatogonia (Taylor et al. 1996), as well as aromatase (Schteingart et al. 1995), plasminogen activator (Nargolwalla et al. 1990) and insulin like growth factor (IGF-I) (Suwanichkul et al. 1993). Recent microarray analyses suggest that at least 300 genes in Sertoli cells are up or down-regulated by FSH (McLean et al. 2002, Sadate-Ngatchou et al. 2004a). Remarkably, the microarray studies identified few new FSH-regulated genes that have known or potential direct influences on germ cell survival or development. However, the relative lack of information provided related to spermatogenesis may be due to the less differentiated status of the Sertoli cells used for the studies that were isolated from immature 20 day-old rats or adult hpg mice that both have few germ cells beyond the spermatocyte stage. Further gene expression studies employing mature Sertoli cells will be useful to better understand the results of FSH signaling.
| Testosterone signaling |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In the testis, only Leydig cells, peritubular cells and Sertoli cells express AR. No AR is expressed in germ cells of the mature testis (Lyon et al. 1975). In rat Sertoli cells, the levels of AR are low or below detection until 5 to 10 days after birth but then increase up to 35 or 60 days of age (Buzek & Sanborn 1988, Bremner et al. 1994, Zhou et al. 1996). Adult AR levels increase and decrease in a cyclical fashion. Specifically, analyses of in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry results revealed that AR levels progressively increase during cell association stages II through VII of the spermatogenic cycle and then decline sharply during or immediately after stage VII to become barely detectable in stages IXXIII (Bremner et al. 1994, Vornberger et al. 1994, Shan et al. 1995). The levels of androgen receptor are highest in stage VII and thus this stage is thought to be the most regulated by and sensitive to testosterone (Kerr et al. 1993). From various models in which testosterone is withdrawn from rats, it has been confirmed that in the absence of testosterone, progressive germ cell degeneration begins during stage VII of the spermatogenic cycle (reviewed in Sharpe 1994).
Testosterone signaling: the classical mechanism
The classical mechanism by which androgens and other steroid hormones exert their effects is initiated with the diffusion of the hormone into a target cell through the plasma membrane. The hormones then bind with high affinity to specific intracellular receptor proteins that are present in the cytoplasm and/or nucleus. The binding of the steroid to its receptor produces conformational changes that result in the formation of a "transformed" or activated receptor that has high affinity for specific DNA-binding sites (Tsai & OMalley 1994). Once the steroid-receptor complex is formed, it acts as a ligand-inducible transcription factor that is able to recruit coactivator proteins and stimulate gene transcription (Bagchi et al. 1992). The entire process required to initiate gene expression via this classical mechanism takes at least 3045 min (Shang et al. 2000, Shang et al. 2002), and the length of time required to produce significant levels of nascent proteins is in the order of hours.
Testosterone regulation of gene expression
Recently, microarray analyses were performed using testis tissue from hpg mice that lack germ cells but contain the somatic cells expressing AR. Although cell-specific information was not produced, 4, 8 and 12 h after injection these studies identified 56, 129 and 48 genes, respectively, that were regulated by testosterone. Interestingly, within these relatively brief incubation periods, more genes were down-regulated than up-regulated by about a 2:1 ratio. In contrast, of the 234 genes regulated by testosterone after 24 h, approximately 2 genes were up-regulated for every down-regulated gene. As was the case for FSH regulated genes, microarray analysis identified few genes that had known or potential direct roles in regulating spermatogenesis (Sadate-Ngatchou et al. 2004b).
Although many genes can be regulated by androgens, relatively few are known to be regulated by androgen receptor binding to androgen response elements in promoters and fewer yet have been proved to be regulated by this classical mechanism in Sertoli cells (Table 1
). In fact, only the gene that encodes the Pem transcription factor is known to be induced by AR-DNA interactions in Sertoli cells (Lindsey & Wilkinson 1996). Thus, based on this limited knowledge of testosterone-regulation of gene expression in Sertoli cells, it is not clear how testosterone acts via gene regulatory mechanisms to support spermatogenesis (see The testosterone paradox below).
|
It has been proposed that Ca2+-dependent actions of androgen in Sertoli cells involve the closing of an ATP-dependent K+ channel because testosterone-mediated increases in [Ca2+]i were nullified by the K+ channel agonist diazoxide (Silva et al. 2002). This finding raises the possibility that depolarization of Sertoli cells due to testosterone closing of K+-ATP channels is the mechanism that causes Ca2+ uptake through L-type voltage dependent Ca2+ channels. An alternative possibility is that androgens may open K+ channels in Sertoli cells as testosterone and DHT reportedly contribute to vasodilation by opening a large conductance, calcium- and voltage-activated K+ channel in coronary myocytes (Deenadayalu et al. 2001).
The testosterone paradox
Testosterone actions present an interesting paradox in that numerous genes and proteins are up-regulated in response to stimulation but few genes have been characterized that are known to be induced with this steroid through the classical mechanism of AR binding to specific promoter elements. At least two observations support the hypothesis that testosterone may act through alternative mechanisms to complement classical AR actions in Sertoli cells. First, Sertoli cells require testicular testosterone levels greater than 70 nM to support full spermatogenesis even though testosterone binding to AR and gene expression responses to testosterone are saturated at 1 nM (Rommerts 1988, Zirkin et al. 1989, Veldscholte et al. 1992, Sharpe 1994). Second, [Ca2+]i levels are elevated in primary Sertoli cells within seconds of androgen stimulation and thus cannot be dependent on AR-DNA interactions and initiation of gene expression (Steinsapir et al. 1991, Gorczynska & Handelsman 1995, Lyng et al. 2000). Together, these observations suggest that testosterone acts in Sertoli cells through pathways in addition to classical mechanisms to regulate spermatogenesis.
Testosterone activates MAP kinase and the CREB transcription factor in Sertoli cells
Increasing evidence has been gathered demonstrating that androgen can directly activate cellular signaling pathways by nongenomic pathways that are independent of AR binding to DNA (reviewed in Cato et al. 2002, Heinlein & Chang 2002, Silva et al. 2002). Particularly relevant is the activation of the MAP kinase pathway by androgens. In other cell types, androgen can induce a number of factors that have been implicated in regulating the MAP kinase cascade including PKA, calmodulin, phospholipase C, protein kinase C and guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) (Finkbeiner & Greenberg 1996). All these factors have been found to be capable of initiating the MAP kinase cascade by stimulating a Ras or a Ras-like protein to activate a Raf MAP kinase kinase kinase (MAPKKK) (Pearson et al. 2001).
Testosterone-mediated activation of MAP kinase was recently characterized in Sertoli cells. Physiological levels of testosterone (10250nM), but not estradiol or progesterone, rapidly (within 15 min) induced the phosphorylation and activation of the Erk MAPK and CREB in Sertoli cells from 15 day-old rats. CREB phosphorylation increased about 3-fold within 1 to 15 min and 5-fold 1 to 2 hrs after stimulation with the non-hydrolizable androgen agonist R1881. Erk phosphorylation followed similar kinetics and the MAP kinase pathway inhibitor PD98059 blocked testosterone-mediated induction of CREB phosphorylation thus supporting the hypothesis that androgen-induced CREB phosphorylation is mediated via the MAP kinase pathway. Further studies have been performed demonstrating that testosterone activates Src kinase in Sertoli cells (Cheng J and Walker WH, unpublished results). A scaffold protein called modulator of non-genomic actions of the estrogen receptor (MNAR) was shown to facilitate the activation of Src kinases and MAPK by androgen as MNAR also forms a complex with AR and Src (Wong et al. 2002, Unni et al. 2004). One result of testosterone-mediated stimulation of the MAP kinase cascasde and CREB was the induction of CREB-mediated transcription. Specifically, testosterone was found to induce the expression of three CREB-regulated genes in Sertoli cells (Fix et al. 2004).
Although other receptors may be involved, three lines of evidence support the hypothesis that AR mediates testosterone-induced Erk and CREB phosphorylation. First, the AR antagonist flutamide inhibited testosterone-mediated phosphorylation of CREB. Second, CREB was not phosphorylated in Sertoli cells lacking AR activity after RNA interference knockdown of AR expression. Third, testosterone could not increase CREB phosphoryl-ation in Sertoli cells containing the testicular feminization (tfm) AR mutant that displays dramatically decreased androgen binding capacity (Fix et al. 2004).
Two models were devised to explain how testosterone may activate MAP kinase, CREB phosphorylation and CREB-mediated transcription in Sertoli cells (Fig. 2
). In the first pathway, testosterone binds to AR causing the recruitment and activation of Src, thereby initiating a series of events leading to the activation of the MAP kinase cascade by the Ras G-protein. In the second pathway, testosterone binding to AR causes an increase in [Ca2+]i that activates numerous potential intermediates that are capable of stimulating Ras or a Ras like G-protein. Results from studies of nonclassical estrogen actions raise the possibility that additional factors may be involved in transmission of androgen signals. Specifically, estrogen-estrogen receptor interactions trigger G protein dependent activation of Src that then stimulates matrix metalloproteases to release heparin bound epidermal growth factor (HB-EGF) from the surface of the cell. The HB-EGF then binds to the EGF receptor resulting in the activation of the MAP kinase cascade (Razandi et al. 2003).
|
| Integration of the FSH and testosterone signaling pathways |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Another characteristic that is shared by FSH and testosterone is the elevation of [Ca2+]i levels in Sertoli cells, although the mechanisms by which elevated [Ca2+]i might support spermatogenesis are not yet known. Together, the shared signals that FSH and testosterone transmit likely explain the redundant functions that these hormones display in supporting spermatogenesis.
There are also differences in the actions of FSH and testosterone. These differences may account for the fact that testosterone but not FSH is capable of maintaining spermatogenesis independently. One difference is that testosterone does not up-regulate cAMP production in Sertoli cells. These findings suggest that either elevated cAMP levels are not required for spermatogenesis or that redundant mechanisms are present. Other possible differences between FSH and testosterone include the regulation of the PI3-K and PLA2 pathways. FSH has been shown to stimulate the PI3-K and PLA2 signaling pathways but thus far there is no evidence that testosterone affects these signaling mechanisms in Sertoli cells. However, other steroid hormones have been shown to activate the PI3-K and PLA2 pathways in other systems by non-classical mechanisms (Bagowski et al. 2001, Honda et al. 2001, Fiorini et al. 2003). In the future, it is possible that testosterone may be found to also regulate the PI3-K and PLA2 pathways. A final difference between FSH and testosterone is the up and down regulation of gene expression via AR-DNA interactions that can only be accomplished after testosterone stimulation. Perhaps future studies will identify genes uniquely regulated by testosterone-induced AR-DNA interactions that are required to maintain spermatogenesis.
| Conclusions and future perspectives |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Acknowledgements |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Alam H, Maizels ET, Park Y, Ghaey S, Feiger ZJ, Chandel NS & Hunzicker-Dunn M 2004 Follicle-stimulating hormone activation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 by the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/AKT/Ras homolog enriched in brain (Rheb)/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway is necessary for induction of select protein markers of follicular differentiation. Journal of Biological Chemistry 279 1943119440.
Allan CM, Garcia A, Spaliviero J, Zhang FP, Jimenez M, Huhtaniemi I & Handelsman DJ 2004 Complete Sertoli cell proliferation induced by follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) independently of luteinizing hormone activity: evidence from genetic models of isolated FSH action. Endocrinology 145 15871593.
Bagchi MK, Tsai MJ, OMalley BW & Tsai SY 1992 Analysis of the mechanism of steroid hormone receptor-dependent gene activation in cell-free systems. Endocrine Reviews 13 525535.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Bagowski CP, Myers JW & Ferrell JE Jr 2001 The classical progesterone receptor associates with p42 MAPK and is involved in phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase signaling in Xenopus oocytes. Journal of Biological Chemistry 276 3770837714.
Blok LJ, Mackenbach P, Trapman J, Themmen APN, Brinkman AO & Grootegoed A 1989 Follicle-stimulating hormone regulates androgen receptor mRNA in Sertoli cells. Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 63 267271.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Blok LJ, Hoogenbrugge JW, Themmen APN, Baarends WM, Post M & Grootegoed A 1992 Transient down-regulation of androgen receptor messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) Expression in Sertoli cells by follicle-stimulating hormone is followed by up-regulation of androgen receptor mRNA and protein. Endocrinology 131 13431349.[Abstract]
Bortolussi M, Zanchetta R, Belvedere P & Colombo L 1990 Sertoli and Leydig cell numbers and gonadotropin receptors in rat testis from birth to puberty. Cell Tissue Research 260 185191.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Bremner WJ, Millar MR, Sharpe RM & Saunders PTK 1994 Immuno-histochemical localization of androgen receptors in the rat testis: evidence for stage-dependent expression and regulation by androgens. Endocrinology 135 12271234.[Abstract]
Buzek SW & Sanborn BM 1988 Increase in testicular androgen receptor during sexual maturation in the rat. Biology of Reproduction 39 3949.[Abstract]
Cato AC, Nestl A & Mink S 2002 Rapid actions of steroid receptors in cellular signaling pathways. Sciences Signal Transduction Knowledge Environment RE9.
Chaudhary J & Skinner MK 1999 E-box and cyclic adenosine mono-phosphate response elements are both required for follicle-stimulating hormone-induced transferrin promoter activation in Sertoli cells. Endocrinology 140 12621271.
Chen JK & Heckert LL 2001 Dmrt1 expression is regulated by follicle-stimulating hormone and phorbol esters in postnatal Sertoli cells. Endocrinology 142 11671178.
Chen Y, Robles AI, Martinez LA, Liu F, Gimenez-Conti IB & Conti CJ 1996 Expression of G1 cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinases, and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors in androgen-induced prostate proliferation in castrated rats. Cell Growth and Differentiation 7 15711578.[Abstract]
Chowdhury M & Steinberger E 1976 Pituitary and plasma levels of gonadotrophins in foetal and newborn male and female rats. Journal of Endocrinology 69 381384.[Abstract]
Claessens F, Celis L, De Vos P, Peeters B, Heyns W, Verhoeven G & Rombauts W 1993 Intronic androgen Response elements of prostatic binding protein genes. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 191 688694.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Claessens F, Verrijdt G, Schoenmakers E, Haelens A, Peeters B, Verhoeven G & Rombauts W 2001 Selective DNA binding by the androgen receptor as a mechanism for hormone-specific gene regulation. Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 76 2330.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Conti M, Toscano MV, Petrelli L, Geremia R & Stefanini M 1983 Involvement of phosphodiesterase in the refractoriness of the Sertoli cell. Endocrinology 113 18451853.[Abstract]
Cottom J, Salvador LM, Maizels ET, Reierstad S, Park Y, Carr DW, Davare MA, Hell JW, Palmer SS & Dent P et al. 2003 Follicle-stimulating hormone activates extracellular signal-regulated kinase but not extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase through a 100-kDa phosphotyrosine phosphatase. Journal of Biological Chemistry 278 71677179.
Crepieux P, Martinat N, Marion S, Guillou F & Reiter E 2002 Cellular adhesion of primary Sertoli cells affects responsiveness of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 to follicle-stimulating hormone but not to epidermal growth factor. Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics 399 245250.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Crepieux P, Marion S, Martinat N, Fafeur V, Vern YL, Kerboeuf D, Guillou F & Reiter E 2001 The ERK-dependent signalling is stage-specifically modulated by FSH, during primary Sertoli cell maturation. Oncogene 20 46964709.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
DAgostino A, Mene P & Stefanini M 1992 Voltage-gated calcium channels in rat Sertoli cells. Biology of Reproduction 46 414418.[Abstract]
Deenadayalu VP, White RE, Stallone JN, Gao X & Garcia AJ 2001 Testosterone relaxes coronary arteries by opening the large-conductance, calcium-activated potassium channel. American Journal of Physiology: Heart and Circulatory Physiology 281 H1720H1727.[ISI]
Delfino FJ & Walker WH 1998 Stage-specific nuclear expression of NF-
B in mammalian testis. Molecular Endocrinology 12 16961707.
Denison SH, Sands A & Tindall DJ 1989 A tyrosine aminotransferase glucocorticoid response element also mediates androgen enhancement of gene expression. Endocrinology 124 10911093.[Abstract]
Dias JA 2005 Endocrinology: fertility hormone in repose. Nature 433 203204.[CrossRef][Medline]
Fan QR & Hendrickson WA 2005 Structure of human follicle-stimulating hormone in complex with its receptor. Nature 433 269277.[CrossRef][Medline]
Finkbeiner S & Greenberg ME 1996 Ca(2 + )-dependent routes to Ras: mechanisms for neuronal survival, differentiation, and plasticity? Neuron 16 233236.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Fiorini S, Ferretti ME, Biondi C, Pavan B, Lunghi L, Paganetto G & Abelli L 2003 17Beta-eEstradiol stimulates arachidonate release from human amnion-like WISH cells through a rapid mechanism involving a membrane receptor. Endocrinology 144 33593367.
Fix C, Jordan C, Cano P & Walker WH 2004 Testosterone activates mitogen-activated protein kinase and the cAMP response element binding protein transcription factor in Sertoli cells. PNAS 101 1091910924.
Foulkes NS, Schlotter F, Pevet P & Sassone-Corsi P 1993 Pituitary hormone FSH directs the CREM functional switch during spermatogenesis. Nature 362 264267.[CrossRef][Medline]
Fragale A, Aguanno S, Kemp M, Reeves M, Price K, Beattie R, Craig P, Volsen S, Sher E & DAgostino A 2000 Identification and cellular localisation of voltage-operated calcium channels in immature rat testis. Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 162 2533.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Franchi E & Camatini M 1985 Evidence that a Ca2 + chelator and a calmodulin blocker interfere with the structure of inter-Sertoli junctions. Tissue Cell 17 1325.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Ghosh S & Baltimore D 1990 Activation in vitro of NF-
B by phosphorylation of its inhibitor I
B. Nature 344 678682.[CrossRef][Medline]
Goetz TL, Lloyd TL & Griswold MD 1996 Role of E box and initiator region in the expression of the rat follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (FSHR) gene in testicular Sertoli cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry 271 3331733324.
Gonzalez-Robayna IJ, Falender AE, Ochsner S, Firestone GL & Richards JS 2000 Follicle-Stimulating hormone (FSH) stimulates phosphorylation and activation of protein kinase B (PKB/Akt) and serum and glucocorticoid-lnduced kinase (Sgk): evidence for A kinase-independent signaling by FSH in granulosa cells. Molecular Endocrinology 14 12831300.
Gorczynska E & Handelsman DJ 1991 The role of calcium in follicle-stimulating hormone signal transduction in Sertoli cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry 266 2373923744.
Gorczynska E & Handelsman DJ 1995 Androgens rapidly increase the cytosolic calcium concentration in Sertoli cells. Endocrinology 136 20522059.[Abstract]
Gorczynska E, Spaliviero J & Handelsman DJ 1994 The relationship between 3',5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate and calcium in mediating follicle-stimulating hormone signal transduction in Sertoli cells. Endocrinology 134 293300.[Abstract]
Grad JM, Dai JL, Wu S & Burnstein KL 1999 Multiple androgen response elements and a Myc consensus site in the androgen receptor (AR) coding region are involved in androgen-mediated up-regulation of AR messenger RNA. Molecular Endocrinology 13 18961911.
Grasso P & Reichert LE Jr 1989 Follicle-stimulating hormone receptor-mediated uptake of 45Ca2 + by proteoliposomes and cultured rat sertoli cells: evidence for involvement of voltage-activated and voltage-independent calcium channels. Endocrinology 125 30293036.[Abstract]
Griswold MD 1998 The central role of Sertoli cells in spermatogenesis. Seminars in Cell and Developmental Biology 9 411416.
Griswold MD, Solari A, Tung PS & Fritz IB 1977 Stimulation by follicle-stimulating hormone of DNA synthesis and of mitosis in cultured Sertoli cells prepared from testes of immature rats. Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 7 151165.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Hamil KG, Conti M, Shimasaki S & Hall SH 1994 Follicle-stimulating hormone regulation of AP-1: inhibition of c-jun and stimulation of jun-B gene transcription in the rat Sertoli cell. Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 99 269277.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Haywood M, Spaliviero J, Jimemez M, King NJ, Handelsman DJ & Allan CM 2003 Sertoli and germ cell development in hypogonadal (hpg) mice expressing transgenic follicle-stimulating hormone alone or in combination with testosterone. Endocrinology 144 509517.
He WW, Sciavolino PJ, Wing J, Augustus M, Hudson P, Meissner PS, Curtis RT, Shell BK, Bostwick DG & Tindall DJ et al. 1997 A novel human prostate-specific, androgen-regulated homeobox gene (NKX3.1) that maps to 8p21, a region frequently deleted in prostate cancer. Genomics 43 6977.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Heckert LL & Griswold MD 1991 Expression of follicle-stimulating hormone receptor mRNA in rat testis and Sertoli cells. Molecular Endocrinology 5 670677.[Abstract]
Heckert LL & Griswold MD 2002 The expression of the follicle-stimulating hormone receptor in spermatogenesis. Recent Progress in Hormonal Research 57 129148.
Heckert LL, Daggett MAF & Chen J 1998 Multiple promoter elements contribute to activity of the follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (FSHR) gene in testicular Sertoli cells. Molecular Endocrinology 12 14991512.
Heinlein CA & Chang C 2002 The roles of androgen receptors and androgen-binding proteins in nongenomic androgen actions. Molecular Endocrinology 16 21812187.
Honda K, Shimohama S, Sawada H, Kihara T, Nakamizo T, Shibasaki H & Akaike A 2001 Nongenomic antiapoptotic signal transduction by estrogen in cultured cortical neurons. Journal of Neuroscience Research 64 466475.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Jannini EA, Ulisse S, Cecconi S, Cironi L, Colonna R, DArmiento M, Santoni A & Cifone MG 1994 Follicle-stimulating hormone-induced phospholipase A2 activity and eicosanoid generation in rat Sertoli cells. Biology of Reproduction 51 140145.[Abstract]
Johnston H, Baker PJ, Abel M, Charlton HM, Jackson G, Fleming L, Kumar TR & OShaughnessy PJ 2004 Regulation of Sertoli cell number and activity by follicle-stimulating hormone and androgen during postnatal development in the mouse. Endocrinology 145 318329.
Jorgensen JS & Nilson JH 2001 AR suppresses transcription of the alpha glycoprotein hormone subunit gene through protein-protein interactions with cJun and activation transcription factor 2. Molecular Endocrinology 15 14961504.
Kangasniemi M, Kaipia A, Mali P, Toppari J, Huhtaniemi I & Parvinen M 1990 Modulation of basal and FSH-dependent cyclic AMP production in rat seminiferous tubules staged by an improved transillumination technique. The Anatomical Record 227 6276.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kerr JB, Millar M, Maddocks S & Sharpe RM 1993 Stage-dependent changes in spermatogenesis and Sertoli cells in relation to the onset of spermatogenic failure following withdrawal of testosterone. The Anatomical Record 235 547559.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ketelslegers JM, Hetzel WD, Sherins RJ & Catt KJ 1978 Developmental changes in testicular gonadotropin receptors: plasma gonadotropins and plasma testosterone in the rat. Endocrinology 103 212222.[Abstract]
Kumar TR, Palapattu G, Wang P, Woodruff TK, Boime I, Byrne MC & Matzuk MM 1999 Transgenic models to study gonadotropin function: the role of follicle-stimulating hormone in gonadal growth and tumorigenesis. Molecular Endocrinology 13 851865.
Lalevee N, Pluciennik F & Joffre M 1997 Voltage dependent calcium current with properties of T-type current in Sertoli cells from immature rat testis in primary cultures. Biology of Reproduction 56 680687.[Abstract]
Lin B, White JT, Ferguson C, Bumgarner R, Friedman C, Trask B, Ellis W, Lange P, Hood L & Nelson PS 2000 PART-1: a novel human prostate-specific, androgen-regulated gene that maps to chromosome 5q12. Cancer Research 60 858863.
Lindsey JS & Wilkinson MF 1996 Pem: a testosterone- and LH-regulated homeobox gene expressed in mouse Sertoli cells and epididymus. Developmental Biology 179 471484.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
Lu S, Tsai SY & Tsai MJ 1997 Regulation of androgen-dependent prostatic cancer cell growth: androgen regulation of CDK2, CDK4, and CKI p16 genes. Cancer Research 57 45114516.
Lu S, Liu M, Epner DE, Tsai SY & Tsai MJ 1999 Androgen regulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21 gene through an androgen response element in the proximal promoter. Molecular Endocrinology 13 376384.
Luke MC & Coffey DS 1994 Human androgen receptor binding to the androgen Response element of prostate specific antigen. Journal of Andrology 15 4151.
Lyng FM, Jones GR & Rommerts FFG 2000 Rapid androgen actions on calcium signaling in rat Sertoli cells and two human prostatic cell lines: Similar biphasic responses between 1 picomolar and 100 nanomolar concentrations. Biology of Reproduction 63 736747.
Lyon MF, Glenister PH & Lamoreux ML 1975 Normal spermatozoa from androgen-resistant germ cells of chimaeric mice and the role of androgen in spermatogenesis. Nature 258 620622.[CrossRef][Medline]
Maguire SM, Tribley WA & Griswold MD 1997 Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) regulates the expression of FSH receptor messenger ribonucleic acid in cultured Sertoli cells and in hypophysectomized rat testis. Biology of Reproduction 56 11061111.[Abstract]
Maizels ET, Cottom J, Jones JC & Hunzicker-Dunn M 1998 Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) activates the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway, inducing small heat shock protein phosphorylation and cell rounding in immature rat ovarian granulosa cells. Endocrinology 139 33533356.
Marion S, Robert F, Crepieux P, Martinat N, Troispoux C, Guillou F & Reiter E 2002 G protein-coupled receptor kinases and beta arrestins are relocalized and attenuate cyclic 3',5'-adenosine monophosphate Response to follicle-stimulating hormone in rat primary Sertoli cells. Biology of Reproduction 66 7076.
McLachlan RI, ODonnell L, Meachem SJ, Stanton PG, De Kretser DM, Pratis K & Robertson DM 2002 Identification of specific sites of hormonal regulation in spermatogenesis in rats, monkeys, and man. Recent Progress in Hormonal Research 57 149179.
McLean DJ, Friel PJ, Pouchnik D & Griswold MD 2002 Oligonucleotide microarray analysis of gene Expression in follicle-stimulating hormone-treated rat Sertoli cells. Molecular Endocrinology 16 27802792.
Meachem SJ, McLachlan RI, de Kretser DM, Robertson DM & Wreford NG 1996 Neonatal exposure of rats to recombinant follicle stimulating hormone increases adult Sertoli and spermatogenic cell numbers. Biology of Reproduction 54 3644.