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Publication : Stage-sensitive blockade of pituitary somatomammotrope development by targeted expression of a dominant negative epidermal growth factor receptor in transgenic mice.

First Author  Roh M Year  2001
Journal  Mol Endocrinol Volume  15
Issue  4 Pages  600-13
PubMed ID  11266511 Mgi Jnum  J:68692
Mgi Id  MGI:1933069 Doi  10.1210/mend.15.4.0625
Citation  Roh M, et al. (2001) Stage-sensitive blockade of pituitary somatomammotrope development by targeted expression of a dominant negative epidermal growth factor receptor in transgenic mice. Mol Endocrinol 15(4):600-13
abstractText  The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and its ligands EGF and transforming growth factor-alpha (TGFalpha) are expressed in the anterior pituitary, and overexpression of TGFalpha in the lactotrope cells of the pituitary gland in transgenic mice results in lactotrope hyperplasia and adenomata, suggesting a role for EGFR signaling in pituitary cell proliferation. To address the role of EGFR signaling in pituitary development in vivo, we blocked EGFR signaling in transgenic mice using the dominant negative properties of a mutant EGFR lacking an intracellular protein kinase domain (EGFR-tr). We directed EGFR-tr expression to GH- and PRL- producing cells using GH and PRL promoters, and a tetracycline-inducible gene expression system, to allow temporal control of gene expression. EGFR-tr overexpression in GH-producing cells during embryogenesis resulted in dwarf mice with pituitary hypoplasia. Both somatotrope and lactotrope development were blocked. However, when EGFR-tr overexpression was delayed to the postnatal period either by directing its expression with the PRL promoter or by delaying the onset of induction with tetracycline in the GH cells, no specific phenotype was observed. Lactotrope hyperplasia during pregnancy also occurred normally in the PRL-EGFR-tr mice. These data suggest that EGFR signaling is required for the differentiation and/or maintenance of somatomammotropes early in pituitary organogenesis but not later in life. (Molecular Endocrinology 15: 600-613, 2001)
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