Our findings that SNP-based PGT-A can mitigate the negative effects of maternal age on IVF outcomes in cycles with transfer, and that pregnancy outcomes from SET cycles are not significantly different from those of double-embryo transfer cycles, support the use of SET when transfers are combined with SNP-based PGT-A.
Cytochrome P450c17, 17 alpha-hydroxylase/17,20 lyase, is a key enzyme in the steroidogenic pathway leading to the production of corticosteroids and androgens from the adrenal gland and sex steroids from the gonads. Both enzymatic activities of the protein are encoded by a single gene, CYP17, which is expressed in both the human adrenal and gonad but not in the placenta, and in the rodent gonad and placenta but not the rodent adrenal. We isolated and sequenced a full-length rat genomic clone (7,553 bases) containing the entire coding region of the rat P450c17 gene, and all intronic sequences and 1,560 bp of 5'-flanking DNA (EMBL Acc#X69816). To determine which sequences in the rat P450c17 promoter may be responsible for basal and cAMP-stimulated gene transcription, deletion constructs containing between -1,560 and -53 base pairs of 5'-flanking DNA from the rat P450c17 gene were ligated to plasmids expressing the reporter gene luciferase and transfected into two mouse cell lines, adrenal Y-1 cells, and testicular Leydig MA-10 cells. Highest basal and cAMP-stimulated luciferase activity were found in constructions containing 156 bp of 5'-flanking DNA. This construction contains a sequence very similar to the consensus cis element reported to be responsible for cAMP enhancement of the rat somatostatin gene and also overlaps a sequence similar to the consensus element for the orphan steroid receptor SF-1. Gel mobility-shift analysis, using a 30-bp oligonucleotide containing this region incubated with cellular extracts from cultured mouse adrenal Y-1 and mouse Leydig MA-10 cells, revealed all the extracts to contain two proteins that bind to this sequence. Neither DNA-protein complex was further retarded by co-incubation with an anti-CREB antibody, suggesting that cAMP regulation of this gene occurs via a non-CREB protein. Mutation of this oligonucleotide resulted in loss of binding of only one of these proteins, but resulted in loss of both basal and cAMP stimulation of rat P450c17 promoter-regulated gene transcription. Southwestern analysis suggests that one of these proteins is larger than SF-1. This study suggests that a protein that binds to an SF-1 like sequence regulates both basal and cAMP-stimulated rat P450c17 gene expression in rodent cells.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.