The concept that androgens are atretogenic, derived from murine ovary studies, is difficult to reconcile with the fact that hyperandrogenic women have more developing follicles than normal-cycling women. To evaluate androgen's effects on primate follicular growth and survival, normal-cycling rhesus monkeys were treated with placebo-, testosterone-(T), or dihydrotestosterone-sustained release implants, and ovaries were taken for histological analysis after 3-10 d of treatment. Growing preantral and small antral follicles up to 1 mm in diameter were significantly and progressively increased in number and thecal layer thickness in T-treated monkeys from 3-10 d. Granulosa and thecal cell proliferation, as determined by immunodetection of the Ki67 antigen, were significantly increased in these follicles. Preovulatory follicles (> 1 mm), however, were not increased in number in androgen-treated animals. Follicular atresia was not increased and there were actually significantly fewer apoptotic granulosa cells in the T-treated groups. Dihydrotestosterone treatment had identical effects, indicating that these growth-promoting actions are mediated by the androgen receptor. These findings show that, over the short term at least, androgens are not atretogenic and actually enhance follicular growth and survival in the primate. These new data provide a plausible explanation for the pathogenesis of "polycystic" ovaries in hyperandrogenism.
Both sexes of adult mice homozygous for a targeted mutation of the Igf1 gene, encoding insulin-like growth factor 1, are infertile dwarfs (approximately 30% of normal size). The testes are reduced in size less than expected from the degree of dwarfism but sustain spermatogenesis only at 18% of the normal level. The epididymides are overall nearly allometric to the reduced body weight, but the distal regions of the duct, vas deferens, seminal vesicles, and prostate are vestigial. Despite the mutational impact on the epididymis, capacitated sperm are able to fertilize wild type eggs in vitro. It is hypothesized that the infertility of male mutants is caused by failure of androgenization resulting in absence of mating behavior, due to drastically reduced levels of serum testosterone (18% of normal). This hormonal deficiency was correlated with an ultrastructural analysis of mutant Leydig cells revealing a significant developmental delay, while assays in organ culture showed that the basal and LH-stimulated production of testosterone by testicular parenchyma is reduced in comparison with wild type controls. The female mutants fail to ovulate even after administration of gonadotropins, which is apparently the primary cause of their infertility, and possess an infantile uterus that exhibits a dramatic hypoplasia especially in the myometrium. The phenotypic manifestations of the mutation were correlated with the localization of transcripts for insulin-like growth factor I and its cognate receptor in wild type reproductive tissues by in situ hybridization.
In the study reported here, we investigated the effect of androgens on recruitment of resting, primordial follicles into the actively growing pool. Healthy, random-cycling female rhesus monkeys were treated with testosterone, dihydrotestosterone (DHT), or vehicle for 3-10 days, after which ovaries were collected for histological analysis. The first stage of follicle growth is the formation of the primary follicle, consisting of an oocyte surrounded by a single layer of cuboidal granulosa cells. The number of primary follicles was significantly increased over time in testosterone-treated animals. In situ hybridization showed that androgen treatment resulted in an increase to 3-fold in insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) and to 5-fold in IGF-I receptor mRNA in primordial follicle oocytes. DHT effects were comparable to those of testosterone, showing that these are androgen receptor-mediated phenomena. These data show that androgens promote initiation of primordial follicle growth and implicate oocyte-derived IGF-I in this activation process.
Longitudinal bone growth, and hence stature, are functions of growth plate chondrocyte proliferation and hypertrophy. Insulin-like growth factor 1 (Igf1) is reputed to augment longitudinal bone growth by stimulating growth plate chondrocyte proliferation. In this study, however, we demonstrate that chondrocyte numbers and proliferation are normal in Igf1 null mice despite a 35% reduction in the rate of long bone growth. Igf1 null hypertrophic chondrocytes differentiate normally in terms of expressing specialized proteins such as collagen X and alkaline phosphatase, but are smaller than wild-type at all levels of the hypertrophic zone. The terminal hypertrophic chondrocytes, which form the scaffold on which long bone growth extends, are reduced in linear dimension by 30% in Igf1 null mice, accounting for most of their decreased longitudinal growth. The expression of the insulin-sensitive glucose transporter, GLUT4, is significantly decreased and the insulin-regulated enzyme glycogen synthase kinase 3beta (GSK3) is hypo-phosphorylated in Igf1 null chondrocytes. Glycogen levels were significantly decreased and ribosomal RNA levels were reduced by almost 75% in Igf1 null chondrocytes. These data suggest that Igf1 promotes longitudinal bone growth by 'insulin-like' anabolic actions which augment chondrocyte hypertrophy.
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