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Publication : Kit signaling via PI3K promotes ovarian follicle maturation but is dispensable for primordial follicle activation.

First Author  John GB Year  2009
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  331
Issue  2 Pages  292-9
PubMed ID  19447101 Mgi Jnum  J:150751
Mgi Id  MGI:3851659 Doi  10.1016/j.ydbio.2009.05.546
Citation  John GB, et al. (2009) Kit signaling via PI3K promotes ovarian follicle maturation but is dispensable for primordial follicle activation. Dev Biol 331(2):292-9
abstractText  In mammals, primordial follicles are generated early in life and remain dormant for prolonged intervals. Their growth resumes via a process known as primordial follicle activation. Recent genetic studies have demonstrated that phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) is the essential signaling pathway controlling this process throughout life, acting via Akt to regulate nucleocytoplasmic shuttling of Foxo3, which functions as a downstream molecular switch. The receptor tyrosine kinase Kit has been implicated by numerous studies as the critical upstream regulator of primordial follicle activation via PI3K/Akt. Here we present a genetic analysis of the contribution of Kit in regulating primordial follicle activation and early follicle growth, employing a knock-in mutation (Kit(Y719F)) that completely abrogates signaling via PI3K. Surprisingly, homozygous Kit(Y719F) female mice undergo primordial follicle activation and are fertile, demonstrating that Kit signaling via PI3K is dispensable for this process. However, other abnormalities were identified in Kit(Y719F) ovaries, including accelerated primordial follicle depletion and accumulation of morphologically abnormal primary/secondary follicles with persistent nuclear Foxo3 localization. These findings reveal specific roles of Kit in the maintenance of the primordial follicle reserve and in the primary to secondary follicle transition, but argue that Kit is dispensable in primordial follicle activation.
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