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Publication : Testosterone levels influence mouse fetal Leydig cell progenitors through notch signaling.

First Author  Defalco T Year  2013
Journal  Biol Reprod Volume  88
Issue  4 Pages  91
PubMed ID  23467742 Mgi Jnum  J:202074
Mgi Id  MGI:5516565 Doi  10.1095/biolreprod.112.106138
Citation  Defalco T, et al. (2013) Testosterone levels influence mouse fetal Leydig cell progenitors through notch signaling. Biol Reprod 88(4):91
abstractText  Leydig cells are the steroidogenic lineage of the mammalian testis that produces testosterone, a key hormone required throughout male fetal and adult life for virilization and spermatogenesis. Both fetal and adult Leydig cells arise from a progenitor population in the testis interstitium but are thought to be lineage-independent of one another. Genetic evidence indicates that Notch signaling is required during fetal life to maintain a balance between differentiated Leydig cells and their progenitors, but the elusive progenitor cell type and ligands involved have not been identified. In this study, we show that the Notch pathway signals through the ligand JAG1 in perivascular interstitial cells during fetal life. In the early postnatal testis, we show that circulating levels of testosterone directly affect Notch signaling, implicating a feedback role for systemic circulating factors in the regulation of progenitor cells. Between Postnatal Days 3 and 21, as fetal Leydig cells disappear from the testis and are replaced by adult Leydig cells, the perivascular population of interstitial cells active for Notch signaling declines, consistent with distinct regulation of adult Leydig progenitors.
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