Luteinizing Hormone Deficiency and Female Infertility in Mice Lacking the Transcription Factor NGFI-A (Egr-1)

Stephen Lee(Washington University in St. Louis), Yoel Sadovsky(Washington University in St. Louis), Alexander H. Swirnoff(Washington University in St. Louis), Jeffrey A. Polish(Washington University in St. Louis), Pam Goda(Washington University in St. Louis), Galina B. Gavrilina(Washington University in St. Louis), Jeffrey Milbrandt(Washington University in St. Louis)
Science
August 30, 1996
Cited by 478

Abstract

The immediate-early transcription factor NGFI-A (also called Egr-1, zif/268, or Krox-24) is thought to couple extracellular signals to changes in gene expression. Although activins and inhibins regulate follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) synthesis, no factor has been identified that exclusively regulates luteinizing hormone (LH) synthesis. An analysis of NGFI-A-deficient mice derived from embryonic stem cells demonstrated female infertility that was secondary to LH-beta deficiency. Ovariectomy led to increased amounts of FSH-beta but not LH-beta messenger RNA, which suggested a pituitary defect. A conserved, canonical NGFI-A site in the LH-beta promoter was required for synergistic activation by NGFI-A and steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1). NGFI-A apparently influences female reproductive capacity through its regulation of LH-beta transcription.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis