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Publication : Embryonic estrogen receptors: do they have a physiological function?

First Author  Gorski J Year  1995
Journal  Environ Health Perspect Volume  103 Suppl 7
Pages  69-72 PubMed ID  8593878
Mgi Jnum  J:30496 Mgi Id  MGI:78006
Doi  10.1289/ehp.95103s769 Citation  Gorski J, et al. (1995) Embryonic estrogen receptors: do they have a physiological function?. Environ Health Perspect 103 Suppl 7:69-72
abstractText  In normal estrogen target tissues, estrogen action is mediated through a specific nuclear transcription factor, the estrogen receptor (ER). The site of estrogen action in the developing organism is therefore determined by cells that contain ER and other necessary tissue and gene-specific components for estrogen-mediated transcription. Immunocytochemical methods were used to determine the cellular localization and tissue distribution of ERs in reproductive tracts of mouse fetuses. Nuclear staining for ER was observed in reproductive tracts at fetal days 13 to 15. ERs were present in the precursors of both male and female reproductive tracts at these early developmental stages, which may be attributable to their similar embryonic origins. However, as the tissues undergo sexual differentiation at later fetal and early neonatal ages, ER increases in the female reproductive tracts as compared with the male. ER was detected by immunoblotting on fetal day 10 (before sexual differentiation) in extracts of whole mouse embryos. To determine whether ER and progesterone receptor genes are expressed earlier in development, we examined RNA from preimplantation mouse embryos using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction techniques. ER mRNA was found in oocytes and fertilized eggs. Message concentration declined at the 2-cell stage and reached its lowest level at the 5- to 8-cell stage. ER mRNA was not detectable at the morula stage but reappeared at the blastocyst stage. Progesterone receptor mRNA was not detectable until the blastocyst stage. The embryonic expression of ER and progesterone receptor genes in the blastocyst suggests a possible functional requirement for estrogen and progesterone receptors in preimplantation embryos.
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