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Molecular and Cellular Biology, June 2003, p. 3951-3964, Vol. 23, No. 11
0270-7306/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.23.11.3951-3964.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan,1 National Hormone and Pituitary Program, Harbor-University of CaliforniaLos Angeles Medical Center, Torrance, California,2 Department of Pharmacology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio3
Received 14 November 2002/ Returned for modification 13 January 2003/ Accepted 17 March 2003
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Regulation of adrenal growth and differentiation is a complex process that requires a diverse array of specific transcription factors and conserved signaling cascades. Compelling examples of this paradigm are the transforming growth factor ß (TGF-ß) family members inhibin and activin. While initially identified as opposing endocrine regulators of pituitary follicle-stimulating hormone secretion (46), both inhibin and activin have since been shown to play a critical role as paracrine and autocrine factors that regulate growth and differentiation in a number of organs, including the gonads and the adrenal gland (43). Much of this evidence has come from studies of the inhibin-null (INH-/-) mouse, which spontaneously develops primary gonadal tumors and adrenocortical carcinomas upon gonadectomy (26). In situ hybridization studies with rat embryos have detailed the developmental expression of inhibin and activin subunits in reproductive tissues (38, 39). Post partum, two different transgenic animals have demonstrated transgene expression driven by the
-inhibin promoter in the murine adrenal gland (12, 15). In humans, inhibin is specifically localized to the fetal zone of the developing adrenal cortex, provoking speculation that the growth dynamics of the fetal zone are regulated at least in part by this hormone (2). Since inhibin and activin have a beta subunit in common, targeted deletion of the inhibin alpha subunit in INH-/- mice not only removes inhibin but leads to dysregulation of activin expression. Like inhibin, activin has essential functions in the regulation of both organ development and tumor growth, where it exerts its effects by modulating cellular differentiation, survival, proliferation, and apoptosis (3). In the human adrenal, activin has been shown to induce apoptosis specifically in cells of the fetal zone and has been considered to be a mediator of physiological fetal-zone regression (44).
While both gonadotropins (18, 19) and androgens (41) have been proposed to contribute to the ovarian cancer phenotype in INH-/- mice, the precise mechanisms underlying dysregulated adrenocortical growth and ultimate carcinoma formation in gonadectomized INH-/- mice have yet to be elucidated. An increasing body of evidence from both mouse models and patients indicating the direct effect of luteinizing hormone (LH) on adrenal function (17, 20, 35) has predicted a role of LH on adrenal tumorigenesis in INH-/- mice. However, the defined contribution of gonadectomy to the induction of adrenal tumorigenesis in this mouse model remains uncertain. While a compensatory increase in pituitary LH following gonadectomy may promote the induction of adrenal tumorigenesis, it is equally plausible that the loss of a gonadal factor such as activin is responsible for the adrenal phenotype.
Genetic intercrossing of INH-/- mice and LH-overproducing transgenic mice, coupled with surgical gonadectomy, results in a spectrum of defined disturbances in inhibin, activin, and LH action. A detailed characterization of the resulting gonadal and adrenal phenotype has allowed us to define the individual roles of these factors, as well as the complex interplay between them, in gonadal and adrenal growth in the context of development and cancer in vivo.
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-inhibin gene (27) and mice harboring the LH-CTP transgene (a chimeric protein derived from the ß subunit of bovine LH and a fragment of the ß subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin) under the control of the bovine LH
-subunit promoter has been described previously (37). To obtain a time course of the ovarian and adrenal phenotype of gonadectomized and nongonadectomized wild-type and INH-/- mice, a group of mice (n = 3 to 6) of both genotypes was euthanized at 9, 12, 15, and 18 weeks of age while another group (n = 3 to 5) of each genotype was gonadectomized at 6 weeks of age by standard procedures and euthanized at 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, and 26 weeks of age. Trunk blood for hormonal measurements and adrenals and ovaries were collected. Following microdissection, adrenal and ovarian weights were measured and the tissues were snap-frozen for protein or RNA extraction or immersed in paraformaldehyde for histologic analysis. The LH-CTP transgene was introduced into the INH-/- background by genetic intercrossing. Both parent inhibin-deficient mice and parent transgenic LH-CTP mice were recruited from extensively outbred colonies. Although generated in the breeding process, no heterozygous INH knockout (INH+/-) animals were used for the in vivo studies. Likewise, only animals hemizygous for the LH-CTP transgene were generated. The body weights of the resulting wild-type, LH-CTP, INH-/-, and compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice were monitored twice a week between 2 and 5 weeks of age, when all animals were sacrificed. Another group of 1.5-week-old mice of all four genotypes was subjected to gonadectomy by standard procedures. Body weights were monitored thereafter on a weekly basis, and all mice were euthanized 17 weeks after gonadectomy. Blood samples and adrenal and ovarian tissues were collected as described above.
Immunoblotting. Immunoblotting was done as described in detail previously (1), by using primary antibodies against Smad2 (1:1000; Zymed Laboratories, San Francisco, Calif.) and ß-actin (1:5000; Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.). Experiments were performed at least three times with adrenal samples from at least two different animals.
Morphology and calculation of adrenal areas. Tissues for morphological evaluation were dehydrated, embedded in paraffin, sectioned, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) by following standard protocols. H&E-stained adrenal sections from four animals of each genotype obtained both before and after gonadectomy were examined with a standard light microscope at a magnification of x50. Areas of the total cortex and the adrenal x zone were quantified with the Quantity One software (version 4.2.0; Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.). To ensure a reliable comparison between specimens, three adjacent sections from the middle portion of each individual adrenal were examined. In order to control for the spherical shape of the mouse adrenal gland, the x-zone area was normalized to the total cortical area and expressed as the x-zone/total cortical area ratio.
Immunohistochemical analysis. PCNA (proliferating-cell nuclear antigen) immunohistochemical analysis was performed as described previously (1). Smad2 immunostaining was done accordingly by using a rabbit polyclonal antibody (1:100; Zymed Laboratories, San Francisco, Calif.).
In vitro activin treatment, organ culture, and TUNEL assay. For in vitro activin experiments, primary adrenal cell cultures were prepared from nongonadectomized 6-week-old wild-type female mice, 6-week-old INH-/- female mice, and 30-week-old INH+/- male mice (n = 4 per genotype), as well as from an established adrenal tumor from a gonadectomized INH-/- mouse, as described in detail elsewhere (17). Cells were incubated in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium-F12-10% fetal calf serum with and without recombinant human activin A (100 ng/ml; R&D Systems, Minneapolis, Minn.) in triplicate for 16 h. Cell counts were expressed as the percent change from untreated cells. For organ culture experiments, mice were euthanized by decapitation and adrenals were injected with medium only or with medium with 100 ng of recombinant human activin A per ml. Adrenals were removed, immediately placed in prewarmed medium, and incubated for 3 or 6 h. Adrenal sections were assayed for apoptosis by fluorescent terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL) assay with the DeadEnd kit (Promega, Madison, Wis.) as recommended by the manufacturer.
In situ hybridization. Templates for in situ hybridization probes for LH-R and P450c17 were cloned from a mouse testicular cDNA library by PCR amplification with the Advantage 2 polymerase kit (Clontech, Palo Alto, Calif.) and restriction site-linked primers (Table 1). PCR fragments were directionally cloned into pcDNA3 vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.), and RNA probes were synthesized with a digoxigenin (DIG) RNA labeling kit (Roche, Indianapolis, Ind.) as suggested by the manufacturer. Probe templates for ActR-IA and ActR-IIB were amplified with primers with T7 and SP6 binding sites (Table 1), and the gel-purified amplification product was used directly as the template for RNA synthesis. Sections were permeabilized with 0.3% Triton X-100-phosphate-buffered saline (PBS)-20 µg of proteinase K per ml and then washed in 100 mM glycine-PBS before being refixed in 4% paraformaldehyde. Tissues were then acetylated with 0.25% acetic anhydrite-triethanolamine buffer and prehybridized under plastic coverslips for 2 h at 55°C. DIG-labeled RNA probes were boiled and hybridized for 14 to 16 h at 55°C. After removal of excess probe with 50% formamide-0.5x SCC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate) and 0.5x SCC and blocking of the sections with 2% BSA-10% sheep serum-PBS, detection of the hybridized probe was done with alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-DIG Fab fragments and 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside-nitroblue tetrazolium substrate (Roche, Indianapolis, Ind.) for 16 to 24 h as suggested by the manufacturer.
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TABLE 1. Primer sequences used for RT-PCR and in situ hybridization, respectivelya
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Northern blot analysis. Total RNA from adrenal glands from wild-type and INH-/- mice at 3, 12, and 25 weeks after gonadectomy, as well as from adrenal glands from two individual animals per genotype (wild-type, LH-CTP, INH-/-, and INH-/--LH-CTP mice at 5 weeks of age and 17 weeks after gonadectomy), was extracted as described above. For detection of the activin beta A subunit, LH-R, P450c17, and P450arom mRNAs by Northern blot assay, DNA probes from the RT-PCRs described above were used. Northern blotting was done as described in detail earlier (1).
Plasma hormone measurements. LH was assayed by radioimmunoassay with reagents from the National Hormone and Pituitary Program. Activin A, estradiol, and testosterone levels were measured with a mouse activin A immunoassay (Quantikinine M kit; R&D Systems Inc.), an ultrasensitive estradiol radioimmunoassay (DSL, Webster, Tex.), and a testosterone enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit (ICN, Costa Mesa, Calif.), respectively. All hormone measurements were performed on single aliquots because of the small amount of plasma available.
Statistical analysis. All results are expressed as the mean ± the standard error of the mean. Statistical comparisons were analyzed by analysis of variance and Fisher's protective least-significant-difference test. Statistical significance was defined as P < 0.05 and is indicated by asterisks in the figures.
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FIG. 1. Time course of ovarian and adrenal phenotype in nongonadectomized and gonadectomized wild-type (WT) and INH-/- animals. The expected increase in ovarian tumor weight in INH-/- mice (A) was accompanied by an increase in plasma activin levels (C) and a decrease in adrenal weight (B). Estradiol (D) and testosterone (E) were not elevated in the presence of ovarian tumors. Morphological examination of wild-type (I to L) and INH-/- adrenals (M to P) at 9 (I and M), 12 (J and N), 15 (K and O), and 18 (L and P) weeks of age revealed x-zone regression in INH-/- mice in the presence of ovarian tumors (O and P). When gonadectomized at 6 weeks of age, INH-/- mice developed adrenal tumors with a significant increase in adrenal weight at 21 weeks of age and thereafter (F). Adrenal tumor development was associated with a significant increase in plasma activin levels (G) and expression of activin beta A subunit mRNA in late-stage adrenal tumors (H). Adrenal morphology in gonadectomized wild-type (Q to T) and INH-/- (U to X) mice at 9 (Q and U), 12 (R and V), 15 (S and W), and 18 (T and X) weeks of age revealed a prominent x zone in the 9-week-old INH-/- mice (U) and, consecutively, development of well-circumscribed x-zone tumors (V to X) surrounded by a morphologically intact zona glomerulosa and fasciculata. The inserts in panels L, P, T, and X represent high magnifications of the x-zone area or x-zone tumor, respectively. Bars in panels I to X, including high-magnification inserts, 20 µm. D, definitive zone; X, x zone; M, medulla; T, tumor.
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Morphological examination revealed a prominent x zone in 9-week-old INH-/- mice with no apparent tumor growth (Fig. 1U). However, although not accompanied by a significant adrenal weight increase, adrenal tumor growth was evident already in 12-week-old INH-/- mice. These well-circumscribed early-stage tumors were surrounded by a morphologically intact zona glomerulosa and fasciculata (Fig. 1V and W). Consistently, morphological examinations at later time points showed a stretched and narrowed but intact definitive zone (Fig. 1X) until large tumor masses eliminated any detectable normal adjacent adrenal tissue. Taken together, these data are suggestive of an x-zone origin of adrenal tumors in gonadectomized INH-/- mice.
Compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice develop massive ovarian tumors, have highly elevated activin levels, and die of cachexia at an early age. An early indicator of ovarian tumor development in INH-/- mice is severe weight loss and a cachexia-like wasting syndrome that eventually results in the death of the animal at 16 to 20 weeks of age (4). By monitoring of body weight, it became evident that compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice failed to gain weight after 3.5 weeks of age and eventually died of severe cachexia at 6 weeks of age (Fig. 2A). In contrast to INH-/- mice, which expectedly had developed only small ovarian tumors at this time point (25.3 ± 4.4 mg [n = 15]), compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice showed massive bilateral ovarian tumors (559.6 ± 73.6 mg [n = 10, P < 0.0001 versus each other genotype] [Fig. 3N ]). Morphological examination of the ovarian tumors of INH-/- mice at this early time point demonstrated preservation of the follicular architecture with an increase in endocrine cell mass compared to that of wild-type ovaries. Tumorlets with occasional apoptotic bodies were evident; however, proliferation was not prominent (Fig. 3G). In contrast, the morphology of ovarian tumors of INH-/--LH-CTP mice was characterized by loss of follicular architecture. The ovarian mass consisted predominantly of solid collections of proliferating endocrine cells. Mitotic activity was evident by readily identifiable mitotic figures. While generally lacking structure, occasional cystic changes were observed. Occasional primitive rosettes were also present, suggesting evidence of endocrine differentiation (Fig. 3H). Consistent with more-aggressive ovarian tumor growth, immunohistochemical examination revealed widespread expression of the proliferation marker PCNA in ovarian tumors from INH-/--LH-CTP mice (Fig. 3L).
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FIG. 2. (A) Body weights of nongonadectomized compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice were significantly lower than those of wild-type (WT) mice at 3 weeks of age ( ) and INH-/- at 3.5 weeks of age (*). All INH-/--LH-CTP mice died of severe cachexia before or at 6 weeks of age. (B) When gonadectomized at 1.5 weeks of age, compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice started developing cachexia-like symptoms at 14 weeks after gonadectomy (GDX) and had significantly lower body weights than gonadectomized INH-/- mice at 16 weeks of age and thereafter (*).
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FIG. 3. Ovarian phenotypes and hormonal profiles of 5-week-old mice. Gross anatomy (A, B, C, and D), H&E-stained sections (E, F, G, and H), and PCNA immunohistochemistry (I, J, K, and L) of ovaries from wild-type (WT) (A, E, and I), LH-CTP (B, F, and J), INH-/- (C, G, and K), and compound INH-/--LH-CTP animals (D [contralateral ovary inserted], H, and L). Whereas INH-/- mice developed only small ovarian tumors with retained follicular architecture, INH-/--LH-CTP mice had massive, undifferentiated ovarian tumors with abundant PCNA expression. As expected, the presence of the LH-CTP transgene led to a significant increase in plasma LH (M) and estradiol (O) levels. The significantly higher tumor weight (N) in INH-/--LH-CTP mice was accompanied by considerably higher plasma activin levels (P). See the text for a full statistical evaluation. Bars for gross anatomy represent 2 mm; bars for histology, including high-magnification inserts, represent 20 µm.
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High levels of LH are not sufficient to induce adrenal tumorigenesis in inhibin-deficient mice. The early death of compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice secondary to the development of ovarian tumors precluded an evaluation of adrenal morphology at time points later than 5 weeks. Macroscopic evaluation of the adrenal glands at 5 weeks revealed that adrenals of INH-/--LH-CTP mice did not develop tumors and in fact were significantly smaller (1.9 ± 0.1 mg [n = 10, P < 0.0001 versus each other genotype]) than the adrenals of wild-type animals (5.9 ± 0.2 mg [n = 20]), LH-CTP mice (7.3 ± 0.3 mg [n = 13]), and INH-/- mice (6.2 ± 0.4 mg [n = 15] [Fig. 4I ]). Even when normalized for body weight, the adrenal weight remained significantly lower in INH-/--LH-CTP mice than in mice of the other genotypes (data not shown), supporting a specific decrease in adrenal size that is not the consequence of a loss of body mass due to the overall cachexia. Histological examination of the adrenals of compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice demonstrated maintained cortical and medullary architecture with a nearly completely absent x zone. Mixed in the remaining x zone were vacuolated cells representing macrophages. While devoid of significant nuclear debris or hemosiderin, these were indicative of a resorptive process. No incipient neoplasms were detectable (Fig. 4H). These data indicate that high levels of LH are not sufficient to induce adrenal tumorigenesis in the context of inhibin deficiency. However, quantification of the x-zone area in 5-week-old INH-/- mice in the presence of only small ovarian tumors revealed a significantly enlarged x zone (30.6 ± 1.6 [n = 4]; P < 0.0001 versus the wild type [17.6 ± 1.4; n = 4] and LH-CTP [17.8 ± 0.8; n = 4]; Fig. 4J), suggesting that inhibin may function as a negative regulator of x-zone growth. More importantly, however, the observations of an unaltered x-zone size in LH-CTP mice, an enlarged x zone in INH-/- animals, and a regressed x zone in compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice indicate the involvement of a factor(s) other than inhibin and LH in the regulation of x-zone growth in this model.
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FIG. 4. Gross appearance and morphological characterization of adrenals from 5-week-old mice. Gross anatomy (A, B, C, and D) and H&E-stained sections (E, F, G, and H) from adrenals of wild-type (WT) (A and E), LH-CTP (B and F), INH-/- (C and G), and compound INH-/--LH-CTP (D and H) mice. Adrenals from compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice were significantly smaller than those from mice of the other genotypes (I). In addition, morphological examination revealed an almost complete lack of the x zone. In contrast, the x zone of INH-/- mice was significantly larger than that of wild-type and LH-CTP mice (J), indicating that inhibin deficiency alone is not sufficient to induce x-zone regression. See the text for a full statistical evaluation. Inserts in panels G and H represent high magnifications of the x-zone area. Bars for gross anatomy represent 2 mm; bars for histology, including high-magnification inserts, represent 20 µm. Note the higher magnification in panel H. D, definitive zone; X, x zone; M, medulla.
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FIG. 5. Gross appearance and morphological characterization of adrenals from mice 17 weeks after gonadectomy. Gross anatomy (A, B, C, D, and E) and H&E-stained sections (F, G, H, I, and J) from adrenals of wild-type (WT) (A and F), LH-CTP (B and G), INH-/- (C and H), and compound INH-/--LH-CTP (D, I, E, and J) mice. While inhibin deficiency was necessary for the induction of adrenal tumor growth (C and D), the presence of the LH-CTP transgene resulted in a significantly larger x zone (L) and bigger adrenal tumors, respectively. The higher adrenal weights of INH-/- and INH-/--LH-CTP mice (K) were paralleled by significantly higher plasma activin levels, as measured by ELISA (N), and adrenal activin beta A and beta B subunit expression, as demonstrated by RT-PCR (M). Notably, the contralateral adrenal from the same INH-/--LH-CTP animal (E) was small and showed a small x zone consisting of large, multinucleated cells (J). See the text for a full statistical evaluation. The inserts in panels H, I, and J represent high magnifications of the x-zone area or x-zone tumor, respectively. Bars for gross anatomy represent 2 mm; bars for histology, including high-magnification inserts, represent 20 µm. Note the higher magnification in panels I and J. D, definitive zone; X, x zone; T, tumor; M, medulla; Liv, liver; Ov, ovary; GAPDH, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase.
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Consistent with the earlier onset of cachexia-like symptoms and the presence of massive adrenal tumors in INH-/--LH-CTP mice, plasma activin levels were notably higher in compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice (74.0 ± 10.6 ng/ml [n = 5, P < 0.0001 versus all other genotypes]) than in INH-/- animals (12.4 ± 3.8 ng/ml [n = 4] [Fig. 5M]). In contrast, the presence of the LH-CTP transgene alone (0.22 ± 0.02 ng/ml [n = 7]) did not alter the plasma activin levels compared to those of wild-type mice (0.24 ± 0.03 ng/ml [n = 6, P = 0.99]). In accordance with the prediction that activin is secreted from the adrenal tumors, expression levels of both the activin beta A and beta B subunits were considerably higher in INH-/- and INH-/--LH-CTP mice than in wild-type and LH-CTP mice (Fig. 5M). In the majority of compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice (five out of six), adrenal tumors occurred unilaterally, accompanied by a small contralateral adrenal (Fig. 5E and J). Morphological examination of a characteristic contralateral adrenal of a compound INH-/--LH-CTP mouse revealed alterations similar to those seen in adrenals from INH-/--LH-CTP mice in the presence of activin-secreting ovarian tumors, namely, nearly complete absence of the x zone. In the location of the x zone were multinucleated giant cells and hemosiderin-laden macrophages indicative of chronic hemorrhage consistent with a destructive process such as apoptosis.
Activin induces apoptosis in the Smad2-expressing adrenal x zone but not in Smad2-negative adrenal tumors of inhibin-deficient mice. Since activin has been shown to induce apoptosis in the fetal zone of the human adrenal cortex (43), we hypothesized that the site of activin action in the murine adrenal gland could be the x zone. In accordance with this concept, in vitro experiments with primary adrenal cell cultures demonstrated a significant decrease in cell number upon activin treatment only in cultures derived from female wild-type (61.2% ± 2.3% of the untreated control; P < 0.0002) and INH-/- (42.4% ± 3.0%; P < 0.0001) mice that contain x-zone cells. No change in cell numbers was seen in adrenal cells from postpubertal males with a regressed x zone (95.2% ± 7.4%; P = 0.57; Fig. 6A). Similarly, cells derived from an INH-/- adrenal tumor were also nonresponsive to activin treatment (96.9% ± 3.3%; P = 0.68). To further define the site of action of activin within the adrenal gland, injection experiments were performed with intact adrenals. In an assay for apoptosis, injection of activin-containing medium was shown to induce cell death specifically in the adrenal x zone (Fig. 6C and E).
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FIG. 6. Treatment of primary adrenal cell cultures from female wild-type (wt) and INH-/- mice (including x-zone cells) with recombinant activin A led to a significant reduction in cell number, whereas cells from postpubertal male adrenals (with no x zone) and adrenal tumor cells were unaffected (A). TUNEL staining (green; nuclear counterstain in blue) after injection of medium alone (B and D) and activin (C and E) revealed apoptosis after 3 (B and C) and 6 (D and E) h of incubation specifically in the x zone of activin-treated adrenals. White arrows depict injection channels with some adjacent, mechanically induced apoptotic nuclei. Bars for histology represent 20 µm. D, definitive zone; X, x zone; M, medulla.
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FIG. 7. RT-PCR panel demonstrating expression of activin receptor subunits (ActR-IA, ActR-IB, ActR-IIA, and ActR-IIB) in adrenals of wild-type (WT), LH-CTP, INH-/-, and compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice (A). In situ hybridization for both ActR-IA (B, low magnification; C, high magnification of corticomedullary boundary) and ActR-IIB (D and E) revealed the highest expression of both receptors in the x zone. In addition, immunostaining in adrenals of wild-type (F and J), LH-CTP (G and K), INH-/- (H and L), and compound INH-/--LH-CTP (I and M) mice before (F to I) and after (J to M) gonadectomy revealed strong x-zone-specific staining of Smad2. In contrast, an adrenal tumor in an INH-/- mouse (L, arrows) showed only weak and partial Smad2 staining whereas no specific staining was detectable in a tumor of an INH-/--LH-CTP mouse (M). Comparable results demonstrating higher Smad2 expression levels in adrenals with a large x zone and low levels in adrenals with no x zone or with adrenal tumors were obtained by immunoblotting (N). Bars represent 20 µm. Liv, liver; Ov, ovary; D, definitive zone; X, x zone; M, medulla; GAPDH, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase.
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FIG. 8. Adrenal tumors in inhibin-deficient mice are capable of producing estradiol and express LH receptor, P450c17, and P450arom. Pronounced elevation of estradiol levels in gonadectomized INH-/--LH-CTP mice (A) was accompanied by partial suppression of elevated LH levels (A, insert). Northern blotting and RT-PCR demonstrated the presence of LH receptor, P450c17, and P450arom transcripts in adrenal tumors of inhibin-deficient mice (B; for details, see text). In situ hybridization for LH receptor (C, D, and E) and P450c17 (F, G, and H) revealed expression of LH receptor and P450c17 in adrenal tumors of gonadectomized INH-/- mice (C and F) and more pronounced expression of LH receptor and P450c17 in compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice (D and G). Adrenals contralateral to the adrenal tumors in INH-/--LH-CTP mice (E and H) showed staining for LH receptor and P450c17 transcripts specifically in cells of the remaining x-zone cells (black arrows). Control reactions with a sense probe are shown as inserts in panels D and G. Bars represent 20 µm. Note the higher magnification in panels E and H. WT, wild type; GDX, gonadectomy.
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P450c17 and P450arom, two of the key steroidogenic enzymes required for the production of sex steroids, are not present in the adrenal glands of adult mice under normal physiological circumstances (16). In accordance with these findings, P450c17 and P450arom transcripts could not be detected in adrenals from wild-type, LH-CTP, INH-/-, or INH-/--LH-CTP mice by Northern blot assay, RT-PCR, or in situ hybridization before gonadectomy (Fig. 8 and data not shown). However, as predicted from the elevated estradiol levels, the presence of the P450c17 and P450arom mRNAs was demonstrated in adrenal tumors from both INH-/- and compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice. Although only a few scattered P450c17-positive cells were found in the adrenal tumors of INH-/- mice by in situ hybridization, widespread expression was found in tumors and contralateral narrow x zones of compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice.
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A number of earlier studies have attempted to define factors that induce growth and regression of the x zone. Gonadectomy prevents x-zone regression (11), indicating that the x zone is preserved upon the withdrawal of a gonadal factor and/or the compensatory increase in gonadotropins following gonadectomy. These studies led to the hypothesis that degeneration of the x zone is contingent upon the presence of sex steroids. However, the x zone still degenerates in tfm mutant mice, which have a defect in the androgen receptor gene, suggesting that the degeneration process does not require androgens (40). Two pieces of evidence presented herein support this notion: (i) the adrenal x zone in nulliparous INH-/- female mice only regresses in the presence of ovarian tumors, and (ii) ovarian tumors in simple INH-/- mice do not secrete larger amounts of estradiol or testosterone than wild-type ovaries. Taken together, these data indicate that sex steroids are not necessary for x-zone regression and suggest that an additional gonadal factor and/or gonadotropins are involved in adrenal x-zone regression in this model.
Activins are widely expressed during mouse development and are highly conserved during vertebrate evolution. As evident in mice with targeted deletions of activin subunits and activin receptor type II, activins are also required for female fertility and gonadotroph function (28, 29). However, the adrenal phenotype of these murine models has not been reported to date. In humans, an increasing body of evidence suggests a significant impact of activin on the regulation of fetal-zone growth. Specifically, activin has been shown to inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis in the adrenal fetal zone (44). Introduction of the LH-CTP transgene into INH-/- mice, which results in pronounced acceleration of ovarian tumor growth accompanied by profound and early elevation of activin levels, has enabled us to explore effects of high levels of activin on adrenal growth and differentiation in vivo. Our data support the concept that activin is also involved in the induction of x-zone regression in the mouse. Increasing activin levels in nongonadectomized INH-/- mice are associated with lower adrenal weight and cumulative x-zone regression. Likewise, high levels of activin in compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice secreted by ovarian tumors or unilateral adrenal tumors are accompanied by regression of the adrenal x zone. In vitro treatment of primary adrenal cell cultures with activin is accompanied by a decrease in cell number only in cultures that contain x-zone cells. Finally, injection of activin into intact adrenals results in induction of apoptosis specifically in the x zone. In summary, our data indicate that when the adrenal is exposed to high levels of activin, the x zone invariably undergoes regression.
Although activin exerts its pleomorphic effects on a variety of cells and tissues mostly as a paracrine factor, activin acts also as a secreted hormone that stimulates pituitary follicle-stimulating hormone secretion (22, 46) andat high levelscan have systemic effects leading to tumor cachexia (5). The activin-signaling pathway requires the action of two integral membrane receptor serine/threonine kinases (referred to as activin receptor types I and II), as well as the intracellular Smad family proteins, in order to transduce a signal from the membrane to the nucleus. Binding of radiolabeled activin A to the rat adrenal has been demonstrated (48), while activin results in apoptosis of human adrenal fetal-zone cells (44). As we demonstrate herein, activin type I and II receptors (ActR) are present in the mouse adrenal, with ActR-IA and ActR-IIB being predominantly expressed in the x zone. Moreover, Smad2, which has been shown to play a pivotal role in the transduction of activin signaling (14), is also mainly expressed in the x zone. Thus, this distinct expression profile is consistent with the sensitivity of x-zone cells to activin, as observed in our in vitro and in vivo assays. If activin does play a role in the suppression of adrenal tumorigenesis in inhibin-deficient mice, however, one has to propose that the adrenal tumor itself escapes the growth-inhibiting autocrine effects of activin. As we show herein, cells derived from INH-/- adrenal tumors are, in fact, unresponsive to in vitro activin treatment. Cancer cells can acquire resistance to the antiproliferative effect of TGF-ß and activin by a number of different mechanisms, including defects in the specific cell surface receptors and mutational inactivation of shared downstream effector components of the signaling pathway (25). Loss of expression or inactivating mutations of Smad2 have been reported in a variety of different tumors, including head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (31), colorectal carcinoma (8), lung carcinoma (45), and serous ovarian carcinoma (21). Intriguingly, Smad2 levels are greatly diminished in adrenal tumors of both INH-/- and compound INH-/--LH-CTP mice, suggesting a possible mechanism of escape from activin-dependent growth inhibition.
Hypophysectomy of both male and female mice causes degeneration of all adrenocortical zones, including the x zone; while LH replacement prevents x-zone degeneration, suggesting that LH is required for maintenance of the x zone (6). Accordingly, we demonstrate that gonadectomy in both wild-type and LH-CTP mice is accompanied by a significant increase in x-zone size. In addition, gonadectomized LH-CTP mice have a significantly larger x zone than do gonadectomized wild-type animals. Furthermore, in gonadectomized, inhibin-deficient mice, the presence of the LH-CTP transgene results in considerably faster growth of adrenal tumors. Whether LH exerts its growth-promoting effects on the x zone directly or indirectly remains to be determined. Direct LH action on adrenal growth and steroidogenesis through classical LH-dependent pathways presupposes the presence of LH receptor expression in the target tissue. In accordance with this concept, the LH receptor is expressed at low levels in the adrenals of all four genotypes upon gonadectomy. However, since in situ hybridization demonstrates abundant LH receptor expression only within the adrenal tumor and not in the adjacent normal adrenal, additional regulatory cascades presumably altered through somatic mutations within the tumor could be involved in the induction of LH receptor expression in this model.
While the function of the x zone is still unknown, x-zone cells contain lipid droplets, characteristic mitochondrial complexes, and a smooth endoplasmic reticulum, which are characteristics of steroid-secreting cells (9). Although the x zone has been proposed to synthesize adrenal sex steroids (33), expression of P450c17 or P450arom (aromatase), key steroidogenic enzymes required for the production of sex steroids, is not detectable in the adrenal glands of adult mice (16). In contrast and as predicted by the elevated estradiol levels, we demonstrate expression of P450c17 and P450arom in adrenal tumors of gonadectomized, inhibin-deficient mice. The distinct morphology of the tumors and illicit expression of receptors and enzymes required for sex steroid production suggest that the adrenal tumors in inhibin-deficient mice adopt functional and morphological features normally restricted to gonadal tissues. It is intriguing to speculate that these characteristics unravel common properties of gonadal and x-zone cells that reflect the common origin of gonadal and adrenal precursor cells from adjacent areas of the mesonephros during early development (42). Accordingly, expression of P450c17 has been demonstrated in a specific spatio-temporal pattern in a distinct cell population of the developing mouse adrenal (16), highlighting the concept of closely related progenitor cells in adrenal and gonadal development. Virilizing symptoms due to overproduction of sex steroids are the most common clinical presentation in children with adrenocortical carcinoma (36). While the cellular origin of these tumors has not been elucidated in detail, it has been proposed that they are derivatives of the fetal zone of the adrenal cortex (13). Given the strikingly similar aspects of childhood adrenocortical cancer and adrenal tumorigenesis in inhibin-deficient mice, it will be intriguing to explore the roles of activin, LH, and downstream effectors in childhood adrenal cancer in future studies.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants DK 02393 and DK 58124 to G.D.H. and Emmy Noether grant BE2177/3-1 awarded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to F.B.
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