Publications (4)8.91 Total impact
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Article: Histone deacetylase inhibition and progesterone act synergistically to stimulate baboon glycodelin gene expression.
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ABSTRACT: During the late luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and early pregnancy, the major secretory product of the uterine glandular epithelial cells in humans and non-human primates is glycodelin. Previous studies using Ishikawa cells, a human endometrial cell line, have shown that a chimeric plasmid containing the baboon glycodelin promoter responds to progestins but the response is modest compared with the induction of glycodelin seen in vivo and in gene array analysis. A recent report indicating that the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A (TSA) promoted glycodelin expression prompted us to examine its mechanism of action. In Ishikawa cells transfected with the baboon glycodelin promoter, TSA and the synthetic progestin medroxyprogesterone acetate both stimulated expression of the reporter and the combined treatment produced a synergistic effect. The effect of TSA and progestin was absent when the same promoter constructs were transfected into COS-1 cells, a kidney cell line, and a TSA effect but no progestin effect was observed in T47D cells, a mammary cell line. Through deletion analysis, the TSA action was localized to the -67/-52 region of the baboon glycodelin promoter, a region which contains the proximal Sp1 site. Deletions of this same region had no effect on progestin responsiveness. Our findings indicate that at least two regions of the glycodelin promoter are important for the normal induction of glycodelin expression. Non-target cells may lack factors which act on the response elements resulting in the restriction of expression to the appropriate target tissue.Journal of Molecular Endocrinology 04/2007; 38(3):401-7. · 3.48 Impact Factor -
Article: Mitogen-activated protein kinase is involved in the progesterone-mediated induction of baboon glycodelin.
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ABSTRACT: In the human and non-human primate the major secretory product of the uterine glandular epithelial cells is glycodelin. The expression of glycodelin is associated with elevated progesterone levels as its production peaks during the late luteal phase of the menstrual cycle and in early pregnancy. Consistent with our previous studies, we found that the majority of the progestin responsiveness of the baboon glycodelin promoter was retained in the -20+48 region, a region devoid of progestin- and Sp1-response elements. Using serial 5' and 3' deletions of 10 basepairs of the promoter within the pGL3Basic vector, we identified the 5' and 3' limits required for progestin responsiveness as -22 and +18, respectively. When the same regions were cloned into the pGL3Promoter vector, a construct that contains the heterologous SV40 promoter, progestin did not enhance expression. Mutation of the DNA binding domain of the progesterone receptor, which disrupts its ability to activate the progesterone response element, does not obliterate its ability to induce expression via the baboon glycodelin promoter. Inhibitors of protein tyrosine kinases, genistein and AG18, blocked the progestin-mediated induction as did an inhibitor of MEK, PD98059, but not an inhibitor of p38 MAP kinase, SB202190. These findings imply that glycodelin induction in response to progestins involves a nongenomic mechanism through the ERK1/2 branch of the MAP kinase pathway. The ultimate target may be a factor involved in the initiation of glycodelin gene transcription.Endocrine 03/2006; 29(1):121-7. · 1.42 Impact Factor -
Article: Regulation of insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1 promoter activity by FKHR and HOXA10 in primate endometrial cells.
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ABSTRACT: Insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1 (IGFBP-1) is abundantly expressed in the liver and decidualized endometrium. FKHR, a FOXO forkhead transcription factor, stimulates IGFBP-1 promoter activity in liver cells through the insulin response sequences (IRSs). HOXA10, a homeobox transcription factor, is important in the decidualization process. Here we show that FKHR and HOXA10 are expressed in baboon endometrium during the menstrual cycle and pregnancy. Levels are lowest during the follicular phase and highest in pregnancy. Reporter gene studies reveal that FKHR stimulates both baboon and human IGFBP-1 promoter activity, whereas HOXA10 alone has a relatively weak effect. When FKHR and HOXA10 are expressed together, promoter activity is markedly up-regulated, which is indicative of cooperativity. A DNA binding-deficient FKHR mutant fails to stimulate promoter activity, even in the presence of HOXA10, and deletion or mutation of IRSs also disrupts the effect of FKHR and cooperativity with HOXA10. Conversely, the IRS region placed upstream of the 31 base pair IGFBP-1 minimal promoter is sufficient to mediate effects of FKHR and cooperativity with HOXA10. Pull-down studies reveal physical association between GST-FKHR and (35)S-HOXA10. These studies show that FKHR and HOXA10 interact directly and can function cooperatively to stimulate IGFBP-1 promoter activity in endometrial cells and perhaps in other settings.Biology of Reproduction 02/2003; 68(1):24-30. · 4.01 Impact Factor -
Article: Detection and quantification of CUPED, an estrogen‐dependent uterine protein, in uterine fluid and endometrial tissue of estrous and pregnant cats
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ABSTRACT: Uterine flushings, media from cultured endometrial explants, and endometrial tissue obtained from estrous and pregnant cats were analyzed for the presence of a previously characterized, high-molecular-weight, estrogen-dependent glycoprotein (CUPED) by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, Western blots, radioimmunoassay, and immunocytochemistry. Elevated levels of CUPED were present within the flushings, media, and tissue of estrous and 3-day postcoital animals. High levels of CUPED were also present in the flushings of 5-day postcoital animals; but the ability of endometrial explants to synthesize CUPED during short-term culture was greatly reduced, and only some of the endometrial glands contained CUPED secretory granules. CUPED was essentially nondetectable in the flushings, media, and tissues of animals pregnant for 7 or more days. Thus CUPED is present within the uterine lumen of the cycling cat at the time of sperm migration through the uterus and also for the first day or two that the developing blastocyst is present within the uterine lumen. The disappearance of CUPED from the tissue and flushings was correlated with the luteal production of progesterone.American Journal of Anatomy 03/1988; 181(4):419 - 424.
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Institutions
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1988–2007
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University of Illinois at Chicago
- Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology (Chicago)
Chicago, IL, USA
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