APC2 is critical for ovarian WNT signalling control, fertility and tumour suppression

Abstract Background Canonical WNT signalling plays a critical role in the regulation of ovarian development; mis-regulation of this key pathway in the adult ovary is associated with subfertility and tumourigenesis. The roles of Adenomatous polyposis coli 2 (APC2), a little-studied WNT signalling pat...

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Main Authors: Noha-Ehssan Mohamed, Trevor Hay, Karen R. Reed, Matthew J. Smalley, Alan R. Clarke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-07-01
Series:BMC Cancer
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-5867-y
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spelling doaj-a3dbe4dd62544d03a2a0e349a57e5ed32020-11-25T03:52:13ZengBMCBMC Cancer1471-24072019-07-0119111610.1186/s12885-019-5867-yAPC2 is critical for ovarian WNT signalling control, fertility and tumour suppressionNoha-Ehssan Mohamed0Trevor Hay1Karen R. Reed2Matthew J. Smalley3Alan R. Clarke4European Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute, Cardiff University School of BiosciencesEuropean Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute, Cardiff University School of BiosciencesEuropean Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute, Cardiff University School of BiosciencesEuropean Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute, Cardiff University School of BiosciencesEuropean Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute, Cardiff University School of BiosciencesAbstract Background Canonical WNT signalling plays a critical role in the regulation of ovarian development; mis-regulation of this key pathway in the adult ovary is associated with subfertility and tumourigenesis. The roles of Adenomatous polyposis coli 2 (APC2), a little-studied WNT signalling pathway regulator, in ovarian homeostasis, fertility and tumourigenesis have not previously been explored. Here, we demonstrate essential roles of APC2 in regulating ovarian WNT signalling and ovarian homeostasis. Methods A detailed analysis of ovarian histology, gene expression, ovulation and hormone levels was carried out in 10 week old and in aged constitutive APC2-knockout (Apc2 −/−) mice (mixed background). Statistical significance for qRT-PCR data was determined from 95% confidence intervals. Significance testing was performed using 2-tailed Student’s t-test, when 2 experimental cohorts were compared. When more were compared, ANOVA test was used, followed by a post-hoc test (LSD or Games-Howell). P-values of < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. Results APC2-deficiency resulted in activation of ovarian WNT signalling and sub-fertility driven by intra-ovarian defects. Follicular growth was perturbed, resulting in a reduced rate of ovulation and corpora lutea formation, which could not be rescued by administration of gonadotrophins. Defects in steroidogenesis and follicular vascularity contributed to the subfertility phenotype. Tumour incidence was assessed in aged APC2-deficient mice, which also carried a hypomorphic Apc allele. APC2-deficiency in these mice resulted in predisposition to granulosa cell tumour (GCT) formation, accompanied by acute tumour-associated WNT-signalling activation and a histologic pattern and molecular signature seen in human adult GCTs. Conclusions Our work adds APC2 to the growing list of WNT-signalling members that regulate ovarian homeostasis, fertility and suppress GCT formation. Importantly, given that the APC2-deficient mouse develops tumours that recapitulate the molecular signature and histological features of human adult GCTs, this mouse has excellent potential as a pre-clinical model to study ovarian subfertility and transitioning to GCT, tumour biology and for therapeutic testing.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-5867-yAPC2APC hypomorphWNT signallingOvarian fertilityOvarian cancerGranulosa cell tumour
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Noha-Ehssan Mohamed
Trevor Hay
Karen R. Reed
Matthew J. Smalley
Alan R. Clarke
spellingShingle Noha-Ehssan Mohamed
Trevor Hay
Karen R. Reed
Matthew J. Smalley
Alan R. Clarke
APC2 is critical for ovarian WNT signalling control, fertility and tumour suppression
BMC Cancer
APC2
APC hypomorph
WNT signalling
Ovarian fertility
Ovarian cancer
Granulosa cell tumour
author_facet Noha-Ehssan Mohamed
Trevor Hay
Karen R. Reed
Matthew J. Smalley
Alan R. Clarke
author_sort Noha-Ehssan Mohamed
title APC2 is critical for ovarian WNT signalling control, fertility and tumour suppression
title_short APC2 is critical for ovarian WNT signalling control, fertility and tumour suppression
title_full APC2 is critical for ovarian WNT signalling control, fertility and tumour suppression
title_fullStr APC2 is critical for ovarian WNT signalling control, fertility and tumour suppression
title_full_unstemmed APC2 is critical for ovarian WNT signalling control, fertility and tumour suppression
title_sort apc2 is critical for ovarian wnt signalling control, fertility and tumour suppression
publisher BMC
series BMC Cancer
issn 1471-2407
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Background Canonical WNT signalling plays a critical role in the regulation of ovarian development; mis-regulation of this key pathway in the adult ovary is associated with subfertility and tumourigenesis. The roles of Adenomatous polyposis coli 2 (APC2), a little-studied WNT signalling pathway regulator, in ovarian homeostasis, fertility and tumourigenesis have not previously been explored. Here, we demonstrate essential roles of APC2 in regulating ovarian WNT signalling and ovarian homeostasis. Methods A detailed analysis of ovarian histology, gene expression, ovulation and hormone levels was carried out in 10 week old and in aged constitutive APC2-knockout (Apc2 −/−) mice (mixed background). Statistical significance for qRT-PCR data was determined from 95% confidence intervals. Significance testing was performed using 2-tailed Student’s t-test, when 2 experimental cohorts were compared. When more were compared, ANOVA test was used, followed by a post-hoc test (LSD or Games-Howell). P-values of < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. Results APC2-deficiency resulted in activation of ovarian WNT signalling and sub-fertility driven by intra-ovarian defects. Follicular growth was perturbed, resulting in a reduced rate of ovulation and corpora lutea formation, which could not be rescued by administration of gonadotrophins. Defects in steroidogenesis and follicular vascularity contributed to the subfertility phenotype. Tumour incidence was assessed in aged APC2-deficient mice, which also carried a hypomorphic Apc allele. APC2-deficiency in these mice resulted in predisposition to granulosa cell tumour (GCT) formation, accompanied by acute tumour-associated WNT-signalling activation and a histologic pattern and molecular signature seen in human adult GCTs. Conclusions Our work adds APC2 to the growing list of WNT-signalling members that regulate ovarian homeostasis, fertility and suppress GCT formation. Importantly, given that the APC2-deficient mouse develops tumours that recapitulate the molecular signature and histological features of human adult GCTs, this mouse has excellent potential as a pre-clinical model to study ovarian subfertility and transitioning to GCT, tumour biology and for therapeutic testing.
topic APC2
APC hypomorph
WNT signalling
Ovarian fertility
Ovarian cancer
Granulosa cell tumour
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-019-5867-y
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