8 research outputs found

    The Role of RFamide-Related Peptide-3 in Age-Related Reproductive Decline in Female Rats.

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    Reproductive senescence, the point in time when females cease to show estrous cyclicity, is associated with endocrine changes in the hypothalamus, pituitary, and gonads. However, the mechanisms triggering this transition are not well understood. To gain a better understanding of the top-down control of the transition from reproductive competence to a state of reproductive senescence, we investigated middle-aged female rats exhibiting varying degrees of reproductive decline, including individuals with normal cycles, irregular cycles, and complete cessation of cycles. We identified hormonal changes in the brain that manifest before ovarian cycles exhibit any deterioration. We found that females exhibit an increase in RFamide-related peptide-3 (RFRP3) mRNA expression in the hypothalamus in middle age prior to changes in estrous cycle length. This increase is transient and followed by subsequent decreases in kisspeptin (KiSS1) and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) mRNA expression. Expression of RFRP3 and its receptor also increased locally in the ovaries with advancing age. While it is well known that aging is associated with decreased GnRH release and downstream disruption of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis, herein, we provide evidence that reproductive senescence is likely triggered by alterations in a network of regulatory neuropeptides upstream of the GnRH system

    Phf15 - a novel transcriptional repressor regulating inflammation in a mouse microglial cell line

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    Aim: Excessive microglial inflammation has emerged as a key player in mediating the effects of aging and neurodegeneration on brain dysfunction. Thus, there is great interest in discovering transcriptional repressors that can control this process. We aimed to examine whether Phf15 - one of the top differentially expressed genes in microglia during aging in humans - could regulate transcription of proinflammatory mediators in microglia.Methods: Real-time quantitative PCR was used to assess Phf15 mRNA expression in mouse brain during aging. Loss-of-function [short hairpin RNA (shRNA) -mediated knockdown (KD) and CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout (KO) of Phf15] and gain-of-function [retroviral overexpression (OE) of murine Phf15 cDNA] studies in a murine microglial cell line (SIM-A9) followed by immune activation with lipopolysaccharide were used to determine the effect of Phf15 on proinflammatory factor (Tnfα, IL-1β, and Nos2) mRNA expression. RNA sequencing was used to determine global transcriptional changes after Phf15 knockout under basal conditions and after lipopolysaccharide stimulation.Results:Phf15 expression increases in mouse brain during aging, similar to humans. KD, KO, and OE studies determined that Phf15 represses mRNA expression levels of proinflammatory mediators such as Tnfα, IL-1β, and Nos2. Global transcriptional changes after Phf15 KO showed that Phf15 specifically represses genes related to the antiviral (type I interferon) response and cytokine production in microglia.Conclusion: We provide the first evidence that Phf15 is an important transcriptional repressor of microglial inflammation, regulating the antiviral response and proinflammatory cytokine production. Importantly, Phf15 regulates both basal and signal-dependent activation and controls the magnitude and duration of the microglial inflammatory response

    Knockdown of hypothalamic RFRP3 prevents chronic stress-induced infertility and embryo resorption.

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    Whereas it is well established that chronic stress induces female reproductive dysfunction, whether stress negatively impacts fertility and fecundity when applied prior to mating and pregnancy has not been explored. In this study, we show that stress that concludes 4 days prior to mating results in persistent and marked reproductive dysfunction, with fewer successful copulation events, fewer pregnancies in those that successfully mated, and increased embryo resorption. Chronic stress exposure led to elevated expression of the hypothalamic inhibitory peptide, RFamide-related peptide-3 (RFRP3), in regularly cycling females. Remarkably, genetic silencing of RFRP3 during stress using an inducible-targeted shRNA completely alleviates stress-induced infertility in female rats, resulting in mating and pregnancy success rates indistinguishable from non-stress controls. We show that chronic stress has long-term effects on pregnancy success, even post-stressor, that are mediated by RFRP3. This points to RFRP3 as a potential clinically relevant single target for stress-induced infertility

    Gene Expression Signatures of Contact Lens-Induced Myopia in Guinea Pig Retinal Pigment Epithelium

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    PurposeTo identify key retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) genes linked to the induction of myopia in guinea pigs.MethodsTo induce myopia, two-week-old pigmented guinea pigs (New Zealand strain, n = 5) wore -10 diopter (D) rigid gas-permeable contact lenses (CLs), for one day; fellow eyes were left without CLs and served as controls. Spherical equivalent refractive errors (SE) and axial length (AL) were measured at baseline and one day after initiation of CL wear. RNA sequencing was applied to RPE collected from both treated and fellow (control) eyes after one day of CL-wear to identify related gene expression changes. Additional RPE-RNA samples from treated and fellow eyes were subjected to quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) analysis for validation purposes.ResultsThe CLs induced myopia. The change from baseline values in SE was significantly different (P = 0.016), whereas there was no significant difference in the change in AL (P = 0.10). RNA sequencing revealed significant interocular differences in the expression in RPE of 13 genes: eight genes were significantly upregulated in treated eyes relative to their fellows, and five genes, including bone morphogenetic protein 2 (Bmp2), were significantly downregulated. The latter result was also confirmed by qRT-PCR. Additional analysis of differentially expressed genes revealed significant enrichment for bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) and TGF-β signaling pathways.ConclusionsThe results of this RPE gene expression study provide further supporting evidence for an important role of BMP2 in eye growth regulation, here from a guinea pig myopia model
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