Abstract

The pituitary gland is integral to the regulation of growth, metabolism, puberty, reproduction, and stress responses. Previously, we found that many genes associated with age-at-menarche in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) displayed increasingly sex-biased expression across the pubertal transition in the mouse pituitary. However, whether this trend exists beyond puberty-related genes was not known. In addition, the regulatory mechanisms underlying these gene expression changes remained to be explored. To answer these questions, we profiled the transcriptome, including microRNAs, of mouse pituitary in both sexes across pubertal transition in an unbiased manner and leveraged a recently published pituitary single cell transcriptome to explore cellular composition changes. We found that the most dynamic temporal changes in both mRNA and miRNA expression occur prior to puberty, underscoring a role for regulation of early pituitary postnatal development. We also observed ~900 genes displaying sex-biased expression patterns, arising during early development and becoming increasingly biased across puberty, including known sex-biased genes such as Fshb and Lhb. However, sex differences in miRNA expression are less pronounced, only 13 miRNAs were found to be sex-biased, suggesting lesser contribution of miRNAs to sex-biased gene expression relative to other forms of regulation. To assess whether pituitary cellular composition could underlie changes in gene expression across pubertal transition, we performed single cell deconvolution of our bulk pituitary gland gene expression. Interestingly, we found that sex differences in cell proportions were estimated to emerge across puberty: a greater proportion of lactotropes was found among females, and greater proportions of gonadotropes and somatotropes were found among males. We observed sex-biased expression patterns of marker genes for these cell types, including Prl, Fshb, and Gh. This finding suggests that cell proportion differences between sexes likely contribute to whole pituitary transcriptome changes we observed, however, to what extent remains to be studied. Together our study indicates that miRNAs play a substantial role in regulation of pituitary postnatal development but that differences in cellular composition may contribute more robustly to sex-biased gene expression.

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