Abstract
The physiological role of lactoferrin (LF), the major estrogen-inducible protein in the murine uterus, is unclear; however, LF may be a useful marker for the study of estrogen action in the uterus. Thus, the expression of LF mRNA and the localization of the protein in genital tract tissues and secretions of female mice (6-8 wk old) at different stages of the estrous cycle were investigated. Uterine luminal fluid (ULF) was analyzed for LF by means of gel electrophoresis and Western blot techniques; LF mRNA and protein were identified in reproductive tract tissues through in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry. At diestrus, the level of LF mRNA was low, and staining for the protein was very light in uterine epithelial cells; LF was undetectable in ULF. At proestrus, LF mRNA and protein increased in the uterine epithelium and LF was readily detectable in ULF. LF mRNA and protein reached the highest levels at estrus. At early metestrus as compared to estrus, LF mRNA and protein were detected in decreasing amounts in uterine epithelial cells; the protein was undetected in ULF. By late metestrus and diestrus, LF mRNA and protein returned to a low level, and the protein was undetectable in ULF. LF protein was also demonstrated by immunocytochemistry in the epithelium of the oviduct, cervix, and vagina. LF protein fluctuation similar to that observed in the uterus was seen in these tissues; however, the uterus demonstrated the most dramatic changes in the number of epithelial cells involved in LF production during the estrous cycle. In summary, LF mRNA and its expression in uterine epithelial cells of the mouse varied with the stage of the estrous cycle. These results, combined with previously reported findings that LF is a major constituent of mouse ULF under the influence of estrogen, suggest that LF may play an important role in normal reproductive processes.
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