Submitted November 12, 2007
Returned for revision December 7, 2007
Accepted February 28, 2008
Ovary
Changes in the Proteome of Functional and Regressing Corpus Luteum During Pregnancy and Lactation in the Rat
Raquel González-Fernández ,
Emilia Martínez-Galisteo ,
Francisco Gaytán ,
José Antonio Bárcena *,
and
José Eugenio Sánchez-Criado
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bb1barua{at}uco.es.
Abstract
The corpus luteum (CL) is an exquisitely regulated transitory endocrine gland necessary for the onset and maintenance of pregnancy in mammals. Most of the data on the mechanisms of CL differentiation at the molecular level come from genomic studies but direct protein data are scarce. Here we have undertaken a differential expression proteomic approach to identify, in an unbiased way, those proteins whose levels change significantly in the rat CL as it evolves from functionality during pregnancy to regression after parturition. Moreover, we have compared the regressing CL with the newly formed functional CL that coexist during lactation under the same endocrine environment. We have defined a "proteomic signature" of CL functionality which is constituted by a set of 24 proteins with a few differences between pregnancy and lactation. Most of these markers are new and are involved in microtubule assembly, retinoic acid transport and Raf kinase signaling cascade; ten are enzymes that define a ketogenic metabolic landscape demonstrating for the first time the prevalence of de novo cholesterol synthesis in luteal cells. The "proteomic signature of regression," on the other hand, is composed by 9 proteins, of which one is 20alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase and two, ferritin and gamma-actin, are new. The discovery of unpredictable new actors in the differentiation process of CL reported here add new hypothesis to explain the complex female reproductive function at the protein level. It will also open new doors on the particular area of each precise protein identified by relating them to cellular differentiation.
Key words:
Pregnancy
Corpus luteum function
Lactation
Progesterone
cholesterol synthesis