Aromatic hydrocarbon receptor-driven Bax gene expression is required for premature ovarian failure caused by biohazardous environmental chemicals
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are toxic chemicals released into the environment by fossil fuel combustion. Moreover, a primary route of human exposure to PAHs is tobacco smoke 1 , 2 . Oocyte destruction and ovarian failure occur in PAH-treated mice 1 , 2 , and cigarette smoking causes earl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature genetics 2001-08, Vol.28 (4), p.355-360 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are toxic chemicals released into the environment by fossil fuel combustion. Moreover, a primary route of human exposure to PAHs is tobacco smoke
1
,
2
. Oocyte destruction and ovarian failure occur in PAH-treated mice
1
,
2
, and cigarette smoking causes early menopause in women
1
,
3
. In many cells, PAHs activate the aromatic hydrocarbon receptor (Ahr), a member of the Per-Arnt-Sim family of transcription factors
4
,
5
. The Ahr is also activated by dioxin, one of the most intensively studied environmental contaminants. Here we show that an exposure of mice to PAHs induces the expression of
Bax
in oocytes
6
, followed by apoptosis. Ovarian damage caused by PAHs is prevented by
Ahr
or
Bax
inactivation. Oocytes microinjected with a
Bax
promoter–reporter construct show Ahr-dependent transcriptional activation after PAH, but not dioxin, treatment, consistent with findings that dioxin is not cytotoxic to oocytes. This difference in the action of PAHs versus dioxin is conveyed by a single base pair flanking each Ahr response element in the
Bax
promoter. Oocytes in human ovarian biopsies grafted into immunodeficient mice also accumulate Bax and undergo apoptosis after PAH exposure
in vivo
. Thus, Ahr-driven
Bax
transcription is a novel and evolutionarily conserved cell-death signaling pathway responsible for environmental toxicant-induced ovarian failure. |
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ISSN: | 1061-4036 1546-1718 |
DOI: | 10.1038/ng575 |