Diane F. Hill
Oregon Health & Science University
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Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2001
Byung Ju Lee; Gyeong J. Cho; Robert B. Norgren; Marie Pierre Junier; Diane F. Hill; Veronica Tapia; Maria E. Costa; Sergio R. Ojeda
TTF-1 is a member of the Nkx family of homeodomain genes required for morphogenesis of the hypothalamus. Whether TTF-1, or other Nkx genes, contributes to regulating differentiated hypothalamic functions is not known. We now report that postnatal hypothalamic TTF-1 expression is developmentally regulated and associated with the neuroendocrine process of female sexual development. Lesions of the hypothalamus that cause sexual precocity transiently activate neuronal TTF-1 expression near the lesion site. In intact animals, hypothalamic TTF-1 mRNA content also increases transiently, preceding the initiation of puberty. Postnatal expression of the TTF-1 gene was limited to subsets of hypothalamic neurons, including LHRH neurons, which control sexual maturation, and preproenkephalinergic neurons of the lateroventromedial nucleus of the basal hypothalamus, which restrain sexual maturation and facilitate reproductive behavior. TTF-1 mRNA was also detected in astrocytes of the median eminence and ependymal/subependymal cells of the third ventricle, where it colocalized with erbB-2, a receptor involved in facilitating sexual development. TTF-1 binds to and transactivates the erbB-2 and LHRH promoters, but represses transcription of the preproenkephalin gene. The singular increase in hypothalamic TTF-1 gene expression that precedes the initiation of puberty, its highly specific pattern of cellular expression, and its transcriptional actions on genes directly involved in neuroendocrine reproductive regulation suggest that TTF-1 may represent one of the controlling factors that set in motion early events underlying the central activation of mammalian puberty.
Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 1994
Ying Jun Ma; Diane F. Hill; Marie Pierre Junier; Maria E. Costa; Stephen Felder; Sergio R. Ojeda
Recent findings have led to the concept that transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha) contributes to the neuroendocrine regulation of female puberty by stimulating the release of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH), the neurohormone controlling sexual development. It was postulated that this effect is mediated by epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFR) and that EGFR may not be located on LHRH neurons, so that TGF alpha-induced LHRH release would require an intermediate cell-to-cell interaction, presumably of glial-neuronal nature. The present study was undertaken to characterize the presence of EGFR in rat hypothalamus and to determine if changes in EGFR gene expression and EGFR protein occur at the time of puberty. RNA blot hybridization demonstrated that the hypothalamus expresses all mRNA species known to encode EGFR. RNase protection assays revealed that alternative splicing of the EGFR primary mRNA transcript occurs in the hypothalamus and produces a predominant transcript encoding the full-length EGFR and a much less abundant, shorter mRNA encoding a truncated, and presumably secreted form of EGFR. EGFR-like immunoreactive material was found in several hypothalamic regions including the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis, supraoptic, suprachiasmatic, and paraventricular nuclei, ependymal cells lining the third ventricle, some astrocytes associated with blood vessels, astrocytes of the pial surface, and tanycytes and glial cells of the median eminence (ME). Low levels of EGFR mRNA were detected by hybridization histochemistry in cells of the same areas containing EGFR-like immunoreactivity. Double-immunohistochemistry revealed that even though LHRH neurons are in close proximity to EGFR-positive cells, they do not contain EGFR. In the ME, EGFR-immunonegative LHRH nerve terminals tightly coexist with EGFR-positive cells, presumably tanycytes and glial astrocytes. EGFR mRNA levels measured by quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assay (RT-PCR) in the ME-arcuate nucleus region at the time of puberty decreased in the morning of the first proestrus, i.e., preceding the first preovulatory surge of gonadotropins, and rebounded at the time of the surge. Functional EGFR protein levels, detected by the ability of the receptor to autophosphorylate in response to ligand or divalent antibody-induced activation, changed in a similar manner at the time of puberty. No such changes were observed in the cerebellum, a brain region irrelevant to neuroendocrine reproductive control. These results demonstrate the existence of EGF receptors in the prepubertal female rat hypothalamus and suggest that changes in EGFR gene expression and biologically active EGFR protein contributes to the neuroendocrine process underlying the first preovulatory surge of gonadotropins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1990
Sergio R. Ojeda; Henryk F. Urbanski; Maria E. Costa; Diane F. Hill; M. Moholt-Siebert
Endocrinology | 1996
Gregory A. Dissen; Diane F. Hill; Maria E. Costa; W. Les Dees; Hernan Lara; Sergio R. Ojeda
The Journal of Neuroscience | 1999
Ying J. Ma; Diane F. Hill; Kimberly E. Creswick; Maria E. Costa; Anda Cornea; Mario N. Lioubin; Gregory D. Plowman; Sergio R. Ojeda
The Journal of Neuroscience | 1994
Ying Jun Ma; K. Berg-Von Der Emde; Melissa Moholt-Siebert; Diane F. Hill; Sergio R. Ojeda
Endocrinology | 2000
Gregory A. Dissen; Jeff A. Parrott; Michael K. Skinner; Diane F. Hill; Maria E. Costa; Sergio R. Ojeda
Endocrinology | 1999
Sergio R. Ojeda; Jennifer K. Hill; Diane F. Hill; Maria E. Costa; Veronica Tapia; Anda Cornea; Ying J. Ma
The Journal of Neuroscience | 1993
Marie Pierre Junier; Diane F. Hill; Maria E. Costa; Stephen Felder; Sergio R. Ojeda
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997
Florence Rage; Diane F. Hill; Miguel Sena-Esteves; Xandra O. Breakefield; Robert J. Coffey; Maria E. Costa; Samuel M. McCann; Sergio R. Ojeda