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RESEARCH
Science
Biology
REPRODUCTION
Newly found estrogen role in males might lead to male
contraceptive
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
12/1/2001
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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| Rex
A. Hess, a professor of reproductive biology and toxicology
at the UI College of Veterinary Medicine, may have uncovered
a new approach for developing a male contraceptive. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Researchers
tapping into the estrogen pathway that regulates fertility in males
have found two independent roles of the hormone, and they may have uncovered
a new approach for developing a male contraceptive.
In a paper that appeared in the Nov. 20 issue of the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Science, University of Illinois scientists report
that estrogen regulates fluid reabsorption in the male reproductive
tract by triggering a protein involved in sodium transport. They also
describe how estrogen sustains the morphological architecture of the
efferent ductules.
"We were not expecting this second role of estrogen," said
Rex A. Hess, a professor of reproductive biology and toxicology at the
University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine. "This
structure-sustaining role appears to be independent of estrogens
molecular function of regulating ion transport. This tells us that estrogen
is important for the expression of other genes with distinct physiological
and morphological functions."
Hess and colleagues had documented in 1997 that estrogen was vital for
fluid reabsorption during the transfer of sperm in fluid from the testis
through the efferent ductules to the epididymis, where sperm matures
and is stored. The PNAS paper provides a molecular picture of what estrogen
does.
Efferent ductules are small tubes that produce concentrated semen. In
a series of experiments using mice lacking the estrogen receptor or
proteins thought to be regulated by estrogen, the scientists showed
that when sodium transport did not occur, excess fluid diluted the sperm,
leaving mice infertile. However, when estrogen receptor was present,
epithelial cells were normal in appearance, even when sodium transport
was abolished in the mice lacking the protein NHE3.
Hess and colleagues discovered that NHE3, which is responsible for the
transport of sodium into and out of cells, was directly responsible
for luminal fluid reabsorption under estrogen regulation. "Thus,
blockage of the estrogen receptor could provide a new target for developing
the perfect contraceptive in the male," Hess said.
"When we treated animals with a potent anti-estrogen compound,
we saw a decline of messenger RNA necessary for sodium transport,"
said Qing Zhou, a doctoral researcher working with Hess.
UI co-authors were Rong Nie and Kay Carnes, researchers in the department
of veterinary biosciences, and Benita S. Katzenellenbogen of the College
of Medicine. Also involved were researchers at the University of Missouri
at Columbia, University of Arizona Health Sciences Center in Tucson,
University of California at San Francisco, and Human Reproductive Sciences
Unit in Edinburgh, Scotland.
The National Institutes of Health and Kenneth A. Scott Charitable Foundation
funded the work.
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