A single injection of Estradiol (E2) given before mating accelerates egg transport (ET) in the rat oviduct via non transcriptional pathways involving cAMP, IP3 and protein kinases (PK), but does it via genomic pathways when it is given after mating. This change in signaling pathways induced by mating is referred to as “intracellular pathway shifting” (IPS), and it can be elicited in complete absence of the male, by mechanical stimulation of the genital area or by artificial insemination. In order to characterize IPS, we compared genomic and nongenomic pathways responsive to E2 in mated and nonmated rats. Estradiol increased cAMP level in the oviduct of nonmated rats, but failed to do so after mating. Moreover, the adenylyl cyclase activator, forskolin, accelerated ET only in nonmated rats, suggesting that mating-associated signals shut down the E2 nongenomic pathway up and down stream of cAMP production. The pattern of gene expression induced by E2 in the oviduct was different in mated and nonmated rats. Estradiol increased transcript levels of 40 genes common to both conditions, e.g. progesterone receptor and brain creatine kinase, indicating that a classical genomic pathway responsive to E2 operates both in mated and nonmated rats. Estradiol increased the expression of other 37 genes in nonmated rats that were unresponsive after mating. StAR is one of these and its increased expression was suppressed by ICI 182780 and the adenylyl cyclase inhibitor SQ22536. Only 2 genes, adenosine monophosphate deaminase 3 and calbindin 9kDa, increased their mRNA levels in response to E2 exclusively in mated rats. Local injection of a morpholino antisense oligonucleotide that inhibited the E2-induced increase expression of calbindin 9kDa protein, partially prevented E2 from accelerating ET in mated rats, but had no effect before mating. Microarray analysis of the oviduct of mated and nonmated rats at equivalent times corresponding to 6 h post coitum identified 21 genes whose expression was up or downregulated by mating. The level of transcript coding for Catechol-OMethyltransferase (COMT), which produces methoxyestradiols from hydroxyestradiols, diminished 6 times and this was confirmed by Real Time PCR. O-methylation of 2-hydroxyestradiol was up to four orders of magnitude higher in oviductal protein extracts from nonmated than from mated rats. Local application of a COMT inhibitor (OR 486) to the oviduct prevented E2 from accelerating ET only in nonmated rats, and local application of 2-methoxyestradiol (2ME) mimicked the effect of E2 on ET only in nonmated rats. The effect of 2ME on ET was blocked by local administration of the PK blocker H-89 or by ICI 182780, but not by Actinomycin D or OR486. In conclusion, a nongenomic pathway, activated by E2 metabolites generated by COMT, mediates the effect of E2 on ET and a classical E2 genomic pathway not involved in the kinetic effect of E2 operates simultaneously in the oviduct before mating. Mating-associated signals shut down this E2 nongenomic pathway, up and downstream of 2ME, and up and downstream of cAMP production, allowing increased expression of genes involved in accelerated ET after mating. The specific signal(s) that elicits IPS, the primary event(s) and cell-phenotype(s) involved, and the biological significance of mating-induced IPS remain to be disclosed. FONDECYT 1030315, PROGRESAR PRE 004/03 and a Scholarship from CONICYT to A P-B. (poster)
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