BES2004 Oral Communications Development and growth (8 abstracts)
Neuroendocrine Unit, Department of Medicine, Royal Free and University College Medical School. UCL, London, UK.
GnRH is essential on reproductive physiology and behaviour. Early in development, GnRH-1 neurons undergo a migratory process from the olfactory placode (OP) to the hypothalamus. Failure of GnRH-1 migration and abnormal olfactory bulb (OB) characterize Kallmann's syndrome (KS) resulting in hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism and anosmia. The X-linked form of KS is due to a dysfunctional KAL-1 gene, which encodes anosmin-1. An autosomal dominant form of KS results from disrupted KAL-2, which encodes FGFR-1. In this study we provide a GnRH-1, KAL-1 and KAL-2 spatio-temporal analysis during human embryogenesis to further understand olfactory system development and elucidate the mechanisms of KAL-1/KAL-2 action. We used GnRH human embryonic primary cells (FNC-B4) to observe in vitro alterations by KAL-1/KAL-2. Human recombinant anosmin-1 (wild type and truncated forms: PIWF4 and PIWF1), correspondent loss of function mutants, specific PIWF1pAb, FGFR-1 mAb and FGFR1 antagonists were used in order to observe these effects.
GnRH-1-immunoreactivity appears in the OP at ED32. Two days later this 'early' GnRH-1 neurons have arrived at the mid-forebrain (before OB morphogenesis proper), whereas another GnRH-1 cell group is accompanied by KAL-1 and KAL-2 cells in the OP, nasal mesenchyme (NM) and rostral forebrain (rF). In vitro assays showed significant neurite outgrowth length and external phenotype changes on FNC-B4 cells: PIWF1, PIWF4 increased length axonal outgrowth and branching which showed a biphasic dose dependent with a 1nM maximum. This effect was not observed when using mutants and blocked by PIWF1pAb, FGFR1 antibodies and FGFR1 antagonists.
The results show 'early' migratory GnRH-1 neurons entering the forebrain before any KAL-1/KAL-2 immunoreactivity in the olfactory system. Soon after, 'late' GnRH-1, KAL-1 and KAL-2 are adjacently localized in OP, NM and rF. Moreover, in vitro studies support the idea that KAL-1 and KAL-2 might interact and affect the migratory phenotype of GnRH-1 neurons.