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Development of the fetal intestine in mice lacking the glucocorticoid receptor (GR)

✍ Scribed by Hans Gartner; M. Colleen Graul; Thomas J. Oesterreicher; Milton J. Finegold; Susan J. Henning


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
267 KB
Volume
194
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

During rodent development there are two surges of circulating corticosterone: one just prior to birth and then one in the third postnatal week. Prior studies have shown that the latter controls the rate of intestinal development in the postnatal period. To date, a role for the earlier surge in the prenatal phase of intestinal development has not been investigated. We hypothesized that the late fetal surge of circulating corticosterone is involved in both morphologic and functional maturation of the intestinal epithelium, and thus that such maturation would be delayed if glucocorticoid action was abrogated. The hypothesis was tested by studying intestinal development in mice lacking a functional glucocorticoid receptor (GR). After GR+/βˆ’ mice were bred onto a C57Bl/6 background, heterozygote matings yielded the expected ratios of βˆ’/βˆ’, +/βˆ’, and +/+ offspring. Analysis of GR mRNA in intestines of +/+ and βˆ’/βˆ’ fetuses confirmed expression in wild‐type mice but not in the GR‐null mice. Intestinal histology of GR+/+ and βˆ’/βˆ’ littermates at E13.5, E15.5, and E18.5 showed no effect of GR genotype on morphologic development. Further studies at E18.5 showed that GRβˆ’/βˆ’ mice have normal functional maturation of the intestinal epithelium as assessed by: lactase activity in the enterocyte lineage, normal numbers of goblet and enteroendocrine cells, and normal numbers of proliferating cells in the intestinal crypts. Neither the minerolocorticoid receptor (MR) nor the pregnane X receptor (PXR) showed compensatory up‐regulation in GRβˆ’/βˆ’ mice. We conclude that, in contrast to our original hypothesis, the rodent intestine passes through a phase of glucocorticoid independence (late fetal) prior to becoming responsive to glucocorticoids in the postnatal period. These findings have implications for the clinical use of corticosteroids to enhance intestinal maturation in preterm infants. Β© 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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