1. Retinoic Acid Biosynthesis Is Impaired in Human and Murine Endometriosis1
- Author
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Pierzchalski, Keely, Taylor, Robert N, Nezhat, Ceana, Jones, Jace W, Napoli, Joseph L, Yang, Guixiang, Kane, Maureen A, and Sidell, Neil
- Subjects
Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Endometriosis ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Animals ,Female ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Humans ,Mice ,Knockout ,Retinol-Binding Proteins ,Cellular ,Species Specificity ,Tretinoin ,endometriosis ,RBP1 ,retinoic acid ,Retinoic acid ,cellular retinol binding protein 1 ,retinol ,retinol ester ,cellular retinol binding protein ,RBP1 protein ,human ,Rbp1 protein ,mouse ,animal experiment ,animal model ,animal tissue ,Article ,biosynthesis ,clinical article ,controlled study ,correlational study ,endometrium biopsy ,endometrium cell ,female ,high performance liquid chromatography ,human ,human cell ,human tissue ,in vitro study ,liquid chromatography ,mouse ,nonhuman ,priority journal ,protein expression ,stroma cell ,tandem mass spectrometry ,tissue level ,animal ,gene expression regulation ,genetics ,knockout mouse ,metabolism ,species difference ,Murinae ,Mus ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine ,Animal production ,Zoology ,Reproductive medicine - Abstract
Endometriosis is characterized by the presence of endometrial glands and stroma in extrauterine sites. Our objective was to determine whether endometriotic lesions (ELs) from women with endometriosis have altered retinoid levels compared with their eutopic endometrium, and to test the hypothesis that defects in all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) biosynthesis in EL is related to reduced expression of cellular retinol-binding protein type 1 (RBP1). Retinoids were evaluated by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry and high-performance liquid chromatography in eutopic endometrial biopsies (EBs) and ELs from 42 patients with pathologically confirmed endometriosis. The ATRA levels were reduced, whereas the retinol and retinyl ester concentrations were elevated in EL compared with EB tissue. Similar results were found in a mouse model of endometriosis that used green fluorescent protein-positive endometrial tissue injected into the peritoneum of syngeneic hosts to mimic retrograde menses. The ATRA biosynthesis in vitro in retinol-treated primary human endometrial stromal cell (ESC) cultures derived from ELs was reduced compared with that of ESCs derived from patient-matched EBs. Correspondingly, RBP1 expression was reduced in tissue and ESCs derived from EL versus EB. Rbp1(-/-) mice showed reduced endometrial ATRA concentrations compared with wild type, associated with loss of tissue organization and hypercellularity. These findings provide the first quantitative measurements of ATRA in human endometrium and endometriosis, demonstrating reduced ATRA in ectopic tissue and corresponding ESC cultures. Quantitation of retinoids in murine endometriosis and in Rbp1(-/-) mice supports the contention that impaired ATRA synthesis caused by reduced RBP1 promotes an "endometriosis phenotype" that enables cells to implant and grow at ectopic sites.
- Published
- 2014