Abstract

Adrenogonadal cell growth and differentiation are controlled by nuclear receptor NR5A1 (Ad4BP/SF-1) that regulates the expression of adrenal and gonadal genes. In addition, SF-1 also resides in the centrosome and controls centrosome homeostasis by restricting the activity of centrosomal DNA-PK and CDK2/cyclin A. Here we show that SF-1 depletion resulted in centriole splitting and amplification due to aberrant activation of DNA-PK in the centrosome of mouse adrenocortical Y1 cells. In the absence of SF-1, GSK3β was aberrantly phosphorylated during G1 phase and β-catenin was accumulated in the centrosome, but not in the nucleus. DNA-PK inhibitor vanillin reversed these phenomena. SF-1 overexpression led to inhibition of centrosomal DNA-PK activation caused by SF-1 depletion. Both full-length SF-1 and truncated SF-1 devoid of its DNA-binding domain rescued the multiple centrosome phenotype caused by SF-1 depletion, indicating that the effect of SF-1 in the centrosome is not contributed by its DNA-binding domain. Furthermore, SF-1 interacted with cyclin A in the centrosome, but not in the nucleus. Depletion of SF-1 also resulted in centriole splitting, genomic instability and reduced growth of mouse testicular Leydig MA10 cells. Centrosomal DNA-PK signaling triggers the accumulation of β-catenin, leading to centrosome over-duplication and centriole splitting. This cascade of centrosomal events results in genomic instability and reduced cell numbers.

Highlights

  • Adrenogonadal cell growth and differentiation are controlled by nuclear receptor NR5A1 (Ad4BP/Steroidogenic factor 1 (SF-1)) that regulates the expression of adrenal and gonadal genes

  • We showed that SF-1 prevented aberrant activation of the DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK)/Akt signaling required for centriole splitting

  • When SF-1 was depleted, activated DNA-PK/Akt signaling led to increased GSK3β phosphorylation followed by the accumulation of β-catenin in the centrosome, causing centriole splitting

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Adrenogonadal cell growth and differentiation are controlled by nuclear receptor NR5A1 (Ad4BP/SF-1) that regulates the expression of adrenal and gonadal genes. SF-1 resides in the centrosome and controls centrosome homeostasis by restricting the activity of centrosomal DNA-PK and CDK2/cyclin A. Steroidogenic factor 1 (SF-1, NR5A1, Ad4BP) is a tissuespecific transcription factor expressed mainly in the adrenal glands and gonads. It belongs to the nuclear receptor superfamily that binds to its cognate DNA sequence to activate the expression of its target genes [1,2]. SF-1 maintains adrenogonadal cell growth and differentiation; SF-1 knockout mice are sex reversed and lack adrenals and gonads [3]. SF-1 resides in the centrosome and its centrosomal residency is required for the maintenance of centrosome homeostasis [4]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call