TY - JOUR
T1 - Inducible Kiss1 knockdown in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus suppressed pulsatile secretion of luteinizing hormone in male mice
AU - Minabe, Shiori
AU - Nakamura, Sho
AU - Fukushima, Eri
AU - Sato, Marimo
AU - Ikegami, Kana
AU - Goto, Teppei
AU - Sanbo, Makoto
AU - Hirabayashi, Masumi
AU - Tomikawa, Junko
AU - Imamura, Takuya
AU - Inoue, Naoko
AU - Uenoyama, Yoshihisa
AU - Tsukamura, Hiroko
AU - Maeda, Kei Ichiro
AU - Matsuda, Fuko
N1 - Funding Information:
center for tonic LH secretion called, “the GnRH/LH pulse generator”. This notion was supported by later studies showing that pulsatile LH secretion was kept normally even after complete hypothalamic
Funding Information:
We thank Drs Kazuyuki Uchida and James K Chambers (The University of Tokyo) for technical support with the histological analysis of testes. We also thank the National Hormone and Peptide Program, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, and are indebted to Dr AF Parlow for providing the LH assay kit and to Drs GR Merriam and KW Wachter for the PULSAR computer program. The LH radioimmunoassay was performed at The University of Tokyo Radioisotope Center. This work was supported in part by the Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (Grant 18H03973 to HT, Grant 16K07987 to NI, and Grant 16H06206 to FM) from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Cul-ture, Sports, Science and Technology and the Cooperative Study Program of National Institute for Physiological Sciences.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 by the Society for Reproduction and Development.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Accumulating evidence suggests that kisspeptin-GPR54 signaling is indispensable for gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)/gonadotropin secretion and consequent reproductive functions in mammals. Conventional Kiss1 knockout (KO) mice and rats are reported to be infertile. To date, however, no study has investigated the effect of inducible central Kiss1 KO/knockdown on pulsatile gonadotropin release in male mammals. Here we report an in vivo analysis of inducible conditional Kiss1 knockdown male mice. The mice were generated by a bilateral injections of either adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors driving Cre recombinase (AAV-Cre) or AAV vectors driving GFP (AAV-GFP, control) into the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) of Kiss1-floxed male mice, in which exon 3 of the Kiss1 gene were floxed with loxP sites. Four weeks after the AAV-Cre injection, the mice showed a profound decrease in the both number of ARC Kiss1-expressing cells and the luteinizing hormone (LH) pulse frequency. Interestingly, pulsatile LH secretion was apparent 8 weeks after the AAV-Cre injection despite the suppression of ARC Kiss1 expression. The control Kiss1-floxed mice infected with AAV-GFP showed apparent LH pulses and Kiss1 expression in the ARC at both 4 and 8 weeks after the AAV-GFP injection. These results with an inducible conditional Kiss1 knockdown in the ARC of male mice suggest that ARC kisspeptin neurons are responsible for pulsatile LH secretion in male mice, and indicate the possibility of a compensatory mechanism that restores GnRH/LH pulse generation.
AB - Accumulating evidence suggests that kisspeptin-GPR54 signaling is indispensable for gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)/gonadotropin secretion and consequent reproductive functions in mammals. Conventional Kiss1 knockout (KO) mice and rats are reported to be infertile. To date, however, no study has investigated the effect of inducible central Kiss1 KO/knockdown on pulsatile gonadotropin release in male mammals. Here we report an in vivo analysis of inducible conditional Kiss1 knockdown male mice. The mice were generated by a bilateral injections of either adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors driving Cre recombinase (AAV-Cre) or AAV vectors driving GFP (AAV-GFP, control) into the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus (ARC) of Kiss1-floxed male mice, in which exon 3 of the Kiss1 gene were floxed with loxP sites. Four weeks after the AAV-Cre injection, the mice showed a profound decrease in the both number of ARC Kiss1-expressing cells and the luteinizing hormone (LH) pulse frequency. Interestingly, pulsatile LH secretion was apparent 8 weeks after the AAV-Cre injection despite the suppression of ARC Kiss1 expression. The control Kiss1-floxed mice infected with AAV-GFP showed apparent LH pulses and Kiss1 expression in the ARC at both 4 and 8 weeks after the AAV-GFP injection. These results with an inducible conditional Kiss1 knockdown in the ARC of male mice suggest that ARC kisspeptin neurons are responsible for pulsatile LH secretion in male mice, and indicate the possibility of a compensatory mechanism that restores GnRH/LH pulse generation.
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U2 - 10.1262/jrd.2019-164
DO - 10.1262/jrd.2019-164
M3 - Article
C2 - 32336702
AN - SCOPUS:85089693414
SN - 0916-8818
VL - 66
SP - 369
EP - 375
JO - Journal of Reproduction and Development
JF - Journal of Reproduction and Development
IS - 4
ER -