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BMI1 promotes steroidogenesis through maintaining redox homeostasis in mouse MLTC-1 and primary Leydig cells

Authors :
Yufeng Wang
Xia Chen
Jun Yu
Shenmin Yang
Dan Zhao
Meng Lin
Xiuliang Dai
Li Chen
Xiaoyan Huang
Xingming Zhong
Tingting Gao
Bo Zheng
Cong Shen
Hong-Bo Cheng
Qiao Zhou
Hong Li
Binbin Shao
Source :
Cell Cycle, article-version (VoR) Version of Record
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis, 2020.

Abstract

In males, aging is accompanied by decline in serum testosterone levels due to impairment of testicular Leydig cells. The polycomb protein BMI1 has recently been identified as an anti-aging factor. In our previous study, BMI1 null mice showed decreased serum testosterone and Leydig cell population, excessive oxidative stress and p16/p19 signaling activation. However, a cause-and-effect relationship between phenotypes and pathways was not investigated. Here, we used the rescue approach to study the role of oxidative stress or p16/p19 in BMI1-mediated steroidogenesis. Our results revealed that treatment with antioxidant NAC, but not down-regulation of p16/p19, largely rescued cell senescence, DNA damage and steroidogenesis in BMI1-deficient mouse MLTC-1 and primary Leydig cells. Collectively, our study demonstrates that BMI1 orchestrates steroidogenesis mainly through maintaining redox homeostasis, and thus, BMI1 may be a novel and potential therapeutic target for treatment of hypogonadism.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15514005 and 15384101
Volume :
19
Issue :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Cycle
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....51bc7e33f2c56f95284070c57b08fe0c