@article {Stewart347757, author = {C. Allison Stewart and M. David Stewart and Ying Wang and Rui Liang and Yu Liu and Richard R. Behringer}, title = {Chronic estrus disrupts uterine gland development and homeostasis}, elocation-id = {347757}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1101/347757}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}, abstract = {Female mice homozygous for an engineered Gnrhr E90K mutation have reduced gonadotropin-releasing hormone signaling, leading to infertility. Their ovaries have numerous antral follicles but no corpora lutea, indicating a block to ovulation. These mutants have high levels of circulating estradiol and low progesterone, indicating a state of persistent estrus. This mouse model provided a unique opportunity to examine the lack of cyclic levels of ovarian hormones on uterine gland biology. Although uterine gland development appeared similar to controls during prepubertal development, it was compromised during adolescence in the mutants. By 20 weeks of age, uterine gland development was comparable to controls, but pathologies, including squamous neoplasia, tubal neoplasia, and cribriform glandular structures, were observed. Induction of ovulations by periodic human chorionic gonadotropin treatment did not rescue post-pubertal uterine gland development. Interestingly, progesterone receptor knockout mice, which lack progesterone signaling, also have defects in post-pubertal uterine gland development. However, progesterone treatment did not rescue post-pubertal uterine gland development. These studies indicate that chronically elevated levels of estradiol with low progesterone and therefore an absence of cyclic ovarian hormone secretion disrupts post-pubertal uterine gland development and homeostasis.}, URL = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/06/15/347757}, eprint = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/06/15/347757.full.pdf}, journal = {bioRxiv} }