Glycogen content in mink uterine glandular and luminal epithelia (GE and LE) is maximal during estrus and is depleted before implantation while embryos are in diapause. Uterine glycogen synthesis in vivo is stimulated by estradiol (E) while its mobilization is induced by progesterone (P). Nevertheless, treatment of an immortalized mink uterine epithelial cell line (GMMe) with E did not affect glycogen production. Interestingly, insulin alone significantly increased synthesis of the nutrient and glycogen content in response to insulin + E was greater than for insulin alone. Our objectives were to determine: 1) If insulin receptor protein (INSR) is expressed by mink uterine GE and LE in vivo and if the amount differs between estrus, diapause and pregnancy; 2) if E, P or insulin regulate insulin receptor gene (Insr) expression by GMMe cells, and 3) if E and P act independently to regulate glycogen metabolism by GMMe cells and/or if their effects are mediated in part through the actions of insulin. The mean (±S.E.) percent INSR content of uterine epithelia was greatest during diapause (GE: 15.65 ± 0.06, LE:16.56 ± 1.25), much less during pregnancy (GE: 2.53 ± 0.60, LE:2.25 ± 0.32) and barely detectable in estrus (GE: 0.03 ± 0.01, LE:0.02 ± 0.01). Glycogen concentrations in GMMe cells increased 10-fold in response to insulin and 20-fold with insulin + E when compared to controls. Expression of Insr was increased 2-fold by insulin and insulin + E when compared to controls and there was no difference between the two hormone treatments, indicating that E does not increase Insr expression in insulin-treated cells. To simulate E-priming, cells were treated with Insulin + E for 24 h, followed by the same hormones + P for the second 24 h (Insulin + E → P) which resulted in Insr and glycogen levels not different from controls. Similarly, cells treated with Insulin + P resulted in glycogen concentrations not different from controls. We conclude that the glycogenic actions of E on GMMe cells are due to increased responsiveness of the cells to insulin, but not as a result of up-regulation of the insulin receptor. Glycogen mobilization in response to P was the result of decreased glycogenesis and increased glycogenolysis occurring concomitantly with reduced Insr expression. Mink uterine glycogen metabolism appears to be regulated in a reproductive cycle-dependent manner in part as a result of the actions of E and P on cellular responsiveness to insulin.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6701937 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.theriogenology.2019.02.023 | DOI Listing |
Biosci Proc
January 2020
Division of Reproductive Sciences, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, USA.
Mammalian embryonic diapause is a reproductive phenomenon defined by the reversible arrest in blastocyst development and metabolic activity within the uterus which synchronously becomes quiescent to implantation. This natural strategy, evident in over 130 species across eight orders, can temporally uncouple conception from delivery until conditions are favorable for the survival of the mother and newborn. While the maternal endocrine milieu has been shown to be important for this process, the local molecular mechanisms by which the uterus and embryo achieve quiescence, maintain blastocyst survival and then resumes blastocyst activation with subsequent implantation in response to endocrine cues remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosci Rep
April 2020
Northwest Nazarene University, 623 S. University Blvd, Nampa, ID 83686, U.S.A.
Cells lining the uterus are responsible for storage and secretion of carbohydrates to support early embryonic development. Histotrophic secretions contain glycogen and glycolytic products such as lactate and pyruvate. Insufficient carbohydrate storage as glycogen has been correlated with infertility in women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
March 2020
Centre de Recherché en Reproduction et Fertilité, Faculté de Médicine Vétérinaire, Université de Montréal, St-Hyacinthe, QC, Canada.
The reproduction of the mink, Neovison vison, has been extensively studied over the past 70 years. The endocrine control of pregnancy is reasonably well understood, but our understanding of early embryo development is limited. The mink is one of the best characterized mammals for the study of embryonic diapause, but in order to unravel the complex interactions that occur between the blastocyst and the uterus during diapause and reactivation, a defined culture media system that supports growth is essential.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Reprod
August 2019
Department of Animal Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA.
Pregnancy loss is common during the peri-implantation period in mammals when glucose is required for both embryonic development and decidualization of the endometrium. As the uterus cannot synthesize glucose, all glucose must come directly from maternal circulation as needed or transiently stored as the macromolecule glycogen. Glycogen acts as a glucose reservoir, storing up to 55 000 glucose moieties per molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
April 2019
Institute of Special Animal and Plant Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, #4899 Juye Street, Jingyue District, Changchun 130112, China.
Embryo implantation in the follows the pattern of many carnivores, in that preimplantation embryo diapause occurs in every gestation. Details of the gene expression and regulatory networks that terminate embryo diapause remain poorly understood. Illumina RNA-Seq was used to analyze global gene expression changes in the uterus during embryo diapause and activation leading to implantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!