| Literature DB >> 18401459 |
Jichun Yang1, Lihong Chen, Xiaoyan Zhang, Yunfeng Zhou, Dongjuan Zhang, Ming Huo, Youfei Guan.
Abstract
Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are ligand-activated nuclear receptors controlling many important physiological processes, including lipid and glucose metabolism, energy homeostasis, inflammation, as well as cell proliferation and differentiation. In the past decade, intensive study of PPARs has shed novel insight into prevention and treatment of dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes. Recently, a large body of research revealed that PPARs are also functionally expressed in reproductive organs and various parts of placenta during pregnancy, which strongly suggests that PPARs might play a critical role in reproduction and development, in addition to their central actions in energy homeostasis. In this review, we summarize recent findings elucidating the role of PPARs in female reproduction, with particular focus on evidence from gene knockout and transgenic animal model study.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18401459 PMCID: PMC2288756 DOI: 10.1155/2008/723243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PPAR Res Impact factor: 4.964
Studies of reproductive phenotypes of female PPARα, PPARβ/δ, and PPARγ-null or transgenic mice.
| PPAR isotype | Reproductive phenotypes | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| PPAR | KO | Maternal abortion and neonatal death; altered ovarian estradiol production | Yessoufou et al. [ |
| TG | Defect in mammary gland development; defect in lactation during pregnancy | Yang et al. [ | |
| PPAR | KO | Placental defects; frequent (>90%) midgestation lethality; placenta lipid accumulation defects | Barak et al. [ |
| PPAR | KO | Embryonic death at embryo day 10; embryonic lipid droplets lacking; placental malformed labyrinth zone; toxic milk | Barak et al. [ |
| TG | Exacerbates mammary gland tumor development | Saez et al. [ |
KO: global or tissue-specific knockout; TG: tissue-specific transgenic.
Figure 1Schematic presentation of regulatory roles of PPARs in reproduction and development.