A critical role for estrogen signaling in penis development

ABSTRACTHypospadias, a developmental defect of the penis, is one of the most common congenital malformations in humans. Its incidence has rapidly increased over recent decades, and this has been largely attributed to our increased exposure to endocrine‐disrupting chemicals. Penis development is prim...

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Veröffentlicht in:The FASEB journal 2019-09, Vol.33 (9), p.10383-10392
Hauptverfasser: Govers, Luke C., Phillips, Tiffany R., Mattiske, Deidre M., Rashoo, Nineveh, Black, Jay R., Sinclair, Adriane, Baskin, Laurence S., Risbridger, Gail P., Pask, Andrew J.
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container_end_page 10392
container_issue 9
container_start_page 10383
container_title The FASEB journal
container_volume 33
creator Govers, Luke C.
Phillips, Tiffany R.
Mattiske, Deidre M.
Rashoo, Nineveh
Black, Jay R.
Sinclair, Adriane
Baskin, Laurence S.
Risbridger, Gail P.
Pask, Andrew J.
description ABSTRACTHypospadias, a developmental defect of the penis, is one of the most common congenital malformations in humans. Its incidence has rapidly increased over recent decades, and this has been largely attributed to our increased exposure to endocrine‐disrupting chemicals. Penis development is primarily an androgen‐driven process; however, estrogen and xenoestrogens are known to affect penis development in both humans and mice. Here, we investigated the role of estrogen in the developing penis. Using a novel penis culture system, we showed that exogenous estrogen directly targets the developing penis in utero to cause hypospadias. In addition, we also uncovered an unexpected endogenous role for estrogen in normal postnatal penis development and showed that a loss of estrogen signaling results in a mild hypospadias phenotype, the most common manifestation of this disease in humans. Our findings demonstrated that both androgen and estrogen signaling are intrinsically required for normal urethral closure. These findings confirmed that penis development is not an entirely androgen‐driven process but one in which endogenous estrogen signaling also plays a critical role.—Govers, L. C., Phillips, T. R., Mattiske, D. M., Rashoo, N., Black, J. R., Sinclair, A., Baskin, L. S., Risbridger, G. P., Pask, A. J. A critical role for estrogen signaling in penis development. FASEB J. 33, 10383†10392 (2019). www.fasebj.org
doi_str_mv 10.1096/fj.201802586RR
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Its incidence has rapidly increased over recent decades, and this has been largely attributed to our increased exposure to endocrine‐disrupting chemicals. Penis development is primarily an androgen‐driven process; however, estrogen and xenoestrogens are known to affect penis development in both humans and mice. Here, we investigated the role of estrogen in the developing penis. Using a novel penis culture system, we showed that exogenous estrogen directly targets the developing penis in utero to cause hypospadias. In addition, we also uncovered an unexpected endogenous role for estrogen in normal postnatal penis development and showed that a loss of estrogen signaling results in a mild hypospadias phenotype, the most common manifestation of this disease in humans. Our findings demonstrated that both androgen and estrogen signaling are intrinsically required for normal urethral closure. These findings confirmed that penis development is not an entirely androgen‐driven process but one in which endogenous estrogen signaling also plays a critical role.—Govers, L. C., Phillips, T. R., Mattiske, D. M., Rashoo, N., Black, J. R., Sinclair, A., Baskin, L. S., Risbridger, G. P., Pask, A. J. A critical role for estrogen signaling in penis development. 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Its incidence has rapidly increased over recent decades, and this has been largely attributed to our increased exposure to endocrine‐disrupting chemicals. Penis development is primarily an androgen‐driven process; however, estrogen and xenoestrogens are known to affect penis development in both humans and mice. Here, we investigated the role of estrogen in the developing penis. Using a novel penis culture system, we showed that exogenous estrogen directly targets the developing penis in utero to cause hypospadias. In addition, we also uncovered an unexpected endogenous role for estrogen in normal postnatal penis development and showed that a loss of estrogen signaling results in a mild hypospadias phenotype, the most common manifestation of this disease in humans. Our findings demonstrated that both androgen and estrogen signaling are intrinsically required for normal urethral closure. These findings confirmed that penis development is not an entirely androgen‐driven process but one in which endogenous estrogen signaling also plays a critical role.—Govers, L. C., Phillips, T. R., Mattiske, D. M., Rashoo, N., Black, J. R., Sinclair, A., Baskin, L. S., Risbridger, G. P., Pask, A. J. A critical role for estrogen signaling in penis development. 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subjects Animals
Endocrine Disruptors - pharmacology
Estrogen Receptor alpha - physiology
Estrogens - pharmacology
exogenous estrogen
Female
Humans
hypospadias
Hypospadias - etiology
Hypospadias - metabolism
Hypospadias - pathology
Male
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Mice, Knockout
Penis - drug effects
Penis - growth & development
urethral closure αERKO
title A critical role for estrogen signaling in penis development
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