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* Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas 66160
School of Molecular Biosciences, Center for Reproductive Biology, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164-4660
Results from experiments using mouse models suggest that the role of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in spermatogenesis is the regulation of Sertoli cell proliferation and, ultimately, the size and spermatogenic capacity of the testis. The regulation of the expression of the FSH receptor (FSHR) gene is very cell specific and plays an initial role in the ultimate response of the Sertoli cells to FSH. The extreme cell specificity and the importance of the FSH response to spermatogenesis have led to an extensive characterization of the promoter of the FSHR gene. Several widely expressed transcription factors - including USF 1 and 2, GATA-1, and SF-1 and potential elements such as an E2F site and an Inr region - have been shown to contribute to the maximal transcription of the transfected FSHR gene. However, these experiments have failed to provide clues as to the cell-specific expression of the FSHR gene. In both cell transfections and in transgenic mice, the promoter can direct expression of transgenes promiscuously. The rodent FSHR promoter contains conserved CpG dinucleotides that were shown to be methylated in nonexpressing cells and tissue but unmethylated in Sertoli cells. The methylated CpG sites could interfere with the binding of general transcription factors and/or lead to a repressive chromatin structure in the nonexpressing cells. While yet-undiscovered cell-specific factors may play a role in the expression of the FSHR gene, repression and activation of local chromatin structure are likely to be involved.
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