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Endocrinology, Vol 126, 341-348, Copyright © 1990 by Endocrine Society
ARTICLES |
C Gupta and A Braun
Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213.
The present study was designed to test whether phospholipase-A2 stimulatory protein (PLSP) has any role during androgen-induced masculine differentiation. Thus, an investigation was made to identify such a protein in the fetal genital tract and to test whether this protein can produce masculinization in vitro. Fetal tracts (15/batch) containing genital ducts and urogenital sinus from male, female, and testosterone-exposed (40 mg/kg.day, from days 13-17 of gestation) female embryonic mice on day 18 of gestation were fractionated using Bio-Rad P-100 gel filtration, DEAE-cellulose, and carboxymethyl- Sephadex chromatography. Phospholipase-A2 (PLA2) stimulatory activity was identified at every step of purification. The final preparation stimulated both bee venom and mouse genital PLA2; however, it had no effect on PLC. The preparation lost its PLA2 stimulatory activity after pronase treatment. The partially purified PLSP fraction produced two bands (63K and 55K), as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis, and its PLA2 stimulatory activity appeared at the region of 55K on a P-100 gel filtration column. PLSP was also identified in female and testosterone-exposed female genital tracts. However, the specific activity of the female PLSP was much lower than that of the male or testosterone-exposed females. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel analysis of 2-3 micrograms partially purified PLSP revealed the presence of a faint 55K band in the females compared to the presence of a darker 55K band in the male and testosterone-exposed female. The intensity of the 63K band was similar in both sexes. PLSP from the male and testosterone-exposed females maintained and stimulated the Wolffian duct, whereas PLSP from the female tract had no masculinizing effect. Thus, the masculinizing activity of the PLSP preparation appears to correlate with its PLA2 stimulatory activity and 55K band intensity, suggesting the role of PLA2 stimulatory protein in masculine differentiation.
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