4.5 Article

Androgens augment the mitogenic effects of oocyte-secreted factors and growth differentiation factor 9 on porcine granulosa cells

Journal

BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION
Volume 73, Issue 4, Pages 825-832

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1095/biolreprod.104.039362

Keywords

androgen receptor; follicle; granulosa cells; growth factors; ovary

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In this study, we test the hypothesis that the growth-promoting action of androgens on granulosa cells requires paracrine signaling from the oocyte. Mural granulosa cells (MGCs) from small antral (1-3 mm) prepubertal pig follicles were cultured in the presence or absence of denuded oocytes (DO) from the same follicles to determine whether mitogenic and/or steroidogenic responses, to combinations of FSH, insulin-like growth factor l (IGF1), and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) were influenced by oocyte-secreted factors (OSFs). To further explore the identity of such factors we performed the same experiments, substituting growth differentiation factor 9 (GDF9), a known OSF, for the DO. OSFs and GDF9 both potently enhanced IGF1-stimulated proliferation, and inhibited FSH-stimulated progesterone secretion. Alone, DHT had little effect on DNA synthesis, but significantly enhanced the mitogenic effects of OSFs or GDF9 in the presence of IGF1. Denuded oocytes, GDF9, and DHT independently inhibited FSH-stimulated progesterone secretion, and androgen, together with DO or GDF9, caused the most potent steroidogenic inhibition. Focusing on mitogenic effects, we demonstrate that both natural androgen receptor (AR) agonists, testosterone and DHT, dose-dependently augmented the mitogenic activity of DO or GDF9. Antiandrogen (hydroxyflutamide) treatment, which is used to block androgen receptor activity, opposed the interaction between androgen and GDF9. In conclusion, androgens stimulate porcine MGC proliferation in vitro by potentiating the growth-promoting effects of oocytes or GDF9, via a mechanism that involves the AR. These signaling pathways are likely to be important regulators of folliculogenesis in vivo, and may contribute to the excess follicle growth that is observed in androgen-treated female animals.

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