The Identification and Characterization of Genes with Potential Roles in Fetal Ovary Development

Improper gonad differentiation can lead to conditions ranging from reduced fertility to sex reversal. In mammals, Sty (sex determining region, Y chromosome) initiates testis development by directing supporting cell precursors to differentiate into testicular Sertoli cells rather than ovarian granulo...

Mô tả chi tiết

Lưu vào:
Hiển thị chi tiết
Tác giả chính: Lee, Hyunjoo Jean
Định dạng: Luận án
Ngôn ngữ:en_US
Thông tin xuất bản: Boston University 2007
Chủ đề:
Truy cập trực tuyến:http://ir.vnulib.edu.vn/handle/123456789/1498
Từ khóa: Thêm từ khóa bạn đọc
Không có từ khóa, Hãy là người đầu tiên gắn từ khóa cho biểu ghi này!
id oai:192.168.1.90:123456789-1498
record_format dspace
spelling oai:192.168.1.90:123456789-14982022-03-28T10:19:27Z The Identification and Characterization of Genes with Potential Roles in Fetal Ovary Development Lee, Hyunjoo Jean Di truyền học Hệ gien Improper gonad differentiation can lead to conditions ranging from reduced fertility to sex reversal. In mammals, Sty (sex determining region, Y chromosome) initiates testis development by directing supporting cell precursors to differentiate into testicular Sertoli cells rather than ovarian granulosa cells. How ovary development is initiated is poorly understood, and we sought to gain a better understanding of fetal ovary development by identifying cell-type-specific genes that might be involved in ovarian somatic cell differentiation. Our lab previously developed Sty--EGFP transgenic mice that express enhanced green fluorescent protein uniquely in the supporting cell lineage of both male and female gonads. This transgene is the earliest known specific marker of these cells. Using fluorescence-activated cell sorting, we negatively selected against CD31+ germ and endothelial cells, and isolated EGFP+/CD31-pre-granulosa cells and EGFP-/CD31- somatic cells from E13.5 Sty-EGFP transgenic ovaries. Using microarrays to compare gene expression between these two cell populations, we identified 471 differentially expressed genes. Ten genes were selected based on their potential for being regulators of gonadogenesis for further analysis using RT-PCR, immunohistochemistry, and in situ hybridization to characterize their expression in normal fetal gonads, as well as in gonads with mutations that cause abnormal ovary differentiation. Several of the characterized genes were expressed in patterns suggestive of a role in fetal ovary and/or testis development. 1700106J16Rik and Sprr2d, two genes that appeared to be specifically expressed in the supporting cell lineage with a female bias at the initial stages of ovary differentiation, were analyzed in detail. Their expression patterns were suggestive of roles in ovarian pre-granulosa cell differentiation. In XX gonads, Sprr2d was downregulated in a spatial pattern resembling that of germ cell differentiation; therefore, a potential link to meiosis in germ cells was explored. In XY gonads, 1700106J16Rik and Sprr2d expression patterns were identical to that of Sty, suggesting that these three genes may be co-regulated. Our observations are consistent with a model for mammalian sex determination wherein the testicular and ovarian pathways are initiated simultaneously within the supporting cell lineage. 2007-12-24T06:25:41Z 2007-12-24T06:25:41Z 2006 Thesis http://ir.vnulib.edu.vn/handle/123456789/1498 en_US Doctor of Philosophy application/pdf Boston University
institution Đại học Quốc Gia Hồ Chí Minh
collection DSpace
language en_US
topic Di truyền học
Hệ gien
spellingShingle Di truyền học
Hệ gien
Lee, Hyunjoo Jean
The Identification and Characterization of Genes with Potential Roles in Fetal Ovary Development
description Improper gonad differentiation can lead to conditions ranging from reduced fertility to sex reversal. In mammals, Sty (sex determining region, Y chromosome) initiates testis development by directing supporting cell precursors to differentiate into testicular Sertoli cells rather than ovarian granulosa cells. How ovary development is initiated is poorly understood, and we sought to gain a better understanding of fetal ovary development by identifying cell-type-specific genes that might be involved in ovarian somatic cell differentiation. Our lab previously developed Sty--EGFP transgenic mice that express enhanced green fluorescent protein uniquely in the supporting cell lineage of both male and female gonads. This transgene is the earliest known specific marker of these cells. Using fluorescence-activated cell sorting, we negatively selected against CD31+ germ and endothelial cells, and isolated EGFP+/CD31-pre-granulosa cells and EGFP-/CD31- somatic cells from E13.5 Sty-EGFP transgenic ovaries. Using microarrays to compare gene expression between these two cell populations, we identified 471 differentially expressed genes. Ten genes were selected based on their potential for being regulators of gonadogenesis for further analysis using RT-PCR, immunohistochemistry, and in situ hybridization to characterize their expression in normal fetal gonads, as well as in gonads with mutations that cause abnormal ovary differentiation. Several of the characterized genes were expressed in patterns suggestive of a role in fetal ovary and/or testis development. 1700106J16Rik and Sprr2d, two genes that appeared to be specifically expressed in the supporting cell lineage with a female bias at the initial stages of ovary differentiation, were analyzed in detail. Their expression patterns were suggestive of roles in ovarian pre-granulosa cell differentiation. In XX gonads, Sprr2d was downregulated in a spatial pattern resembling that of germ cell differentiation; therefore, a potential link to meiosis in germ cells was explored. In XY gonads, 1700106J16Rik and Sprr2d expression patterns were identical to that of Sty, suggesting that these three genes may be co-regulated. Our observations are consistent with a model for mammalian sex determination wherein the testicular and ovarian pathways are initiated simultaneously within the supporting cell lineage.
format Thesis
author Lee, Hyunjoo Jean
author_facet Lee, Hyunjoo Jean
author_sort Lee, Hyunjoo Jean
title The Identification and Characterization of Genes with Potential Roles in Fetal Ovary Development
title_short The Identification and Characterization of Genes with Potential Roles in Fetal Ovary Development
title_full The Identification and Characterization of Genes with Potential Roles in Fetal Ovary Development
title_fullStr The Identification and Characterization of Genes with Potential Roles in Fetal Ovary Development
title_full_unstemmed The Identification and Characterization of Genes with Potential Roles in Fetal Ovary Development
title_sort identification and characterization of genes with potential roles in fetal ovary development
publisher Boston University
publishDate 2007
url http://ir.vnulib.edu.vn/handle/123456789/1498
work_keys_str_mv AT leehyunjoojean theidentificationandcharacterizationofgeneswithpotentialrolesinfetalovarydevelopment
AT leehyunjoojean identificationandcharacterizationofgeneswithpotentialrolesinfetalovarydevelopment
_version_ 1749008649060089856