Abstract
Abstract
Progestins increase the activity and rate of synthesis of cathepsin D, a lysosomal aspartyl protease, in the uterine luminal epithelium in ovariectomized rats. Western blot analysis of luminal epithelial proteins determined that the progestin, medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) increased the 43-kDa form of cathepsin D by 7-fold in 24 hr, whereas estradiol increased the amount of the same form by only 2-fold. To examine the precursor-product relationship between cathepsin D proteins in the luminal epithelium and stroma-myometrium after progestin or estradiol treatment, uterine proteins were prelabeled by incubation with [35S]methionine in vitro, cathepsin D was isolated by immunoprecipitation, and equal amounts of labeled cathepsin D were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. After each hormonal treatment in each uterine tissue, a 48-kDa precursor was processed into a 44-kDa cathepsin D product. Endoglycosidase H digestion of [35S]methionine-labeled cathepsin D from the luminal epithelium and stroma-myometrium of medroxyprogesterone-treated rats shifted the molecular masses of the cathepsin D proteins by approximately 5.7 kDa. To examine the contribution of increased mRNA to increased rates of cathepsin D synthesis, we measured levels of cathepsin D mRNA in uterine tissues after progestin and estrogen treatment. Total RNA was isolated from the uterine luminal epithelium and from the stroma-myometrium. Northern blot analysis identified a single 2.2-kb RNA band corresponding to the size expected for cathepsin D mRNA. Medroxyprogesterone increased levels of cathepsin D mRNA in the luminal epithelium (>17-fold) and in the stroma myometrium (3-fold), with maximum increases at 9 hr after treatment. Estradiol also increased cathepsin D mRNA levels in both uterine tissues, but by only 2-fold. No hormonal effects on liver cathepsin D mRNA were observed. Increases in cathepsin D synthesis and activity in uterine tissues in response to progestin and estrogen appear to depend in part upon increased levels of mRNA.
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