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The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 88, No. 1 471-477
Copyright © 2003 by The Endocrine Society


Original Article

Fetal Lung Maturation in Estrogen-Deprived Baboons

Gerald J. Pepe, Philip L. Ballard and Eugene D. Albrecht

Department of Physiological Sciences (G.J.P.), Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, Virginia 23501-1980; Department of Pediatrics (P.L.B.), University of Pennsylvania, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104; and Departments of Obstetrics/Gynecology/Reproductive Sciences and Physiology (E.D.A.), Center for Studies in Reproduction, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201-1509

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Gerald J. Pepe, Ph.D., Department of Physiological Sciences, Eastern Virginia Medical School, P.O. Box 1980, Norfolk, Virginia 23501-1980. E-mail: pepegj{at}evms.edu.

We have previously shown that estrogen plays a central integrative role in regulating key aspects of fetal-placental development and that inhibition of estrogen production during the second half of baboon pregnancy suppressed fetal adrenal function. Because maturation of the fetal lung is dependent on cortisol of fetal adrenal origin, the current study determined whether lung development and expression of surfactant proteins (SPs) A and B were altered at term in estrogen-deprived baboons. Fetal lungs were obtained on d 100, 165, and 175 of gestation (term = d 184) from untreated baboons and on d 165 from animals treated daily during the second half of pregnancy either with the aromatase inhibitor CGS 20267 alone or with CGS 20267 and estradiol benzoate. Umbilical venous estradiol levels were suppressed by more than 95% by CGS 20267 and elevated by CGS 20267 and estrogen. Although umbilical serum cortisol levels were also suppressed by 35% by CGS 20267, cortisol levels in the fetal lung of estrogen-suppressed baboons were similar to values in untreated animals. Immunocytochemistry demonstrated that CGS 20267 treatment did not alter fetal lung expression of the 11ß-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase enzyme-1 enzyme catalyzing reduction of cortisone to cortisol. However, immunocytochemical expression of the 11ß-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase enzyme-2 catalyzing oxidation of cortisol to cortisone appeared lower in lungs of estrogen-deprived fetuses and restored to normal by CGS 20267 and estrogen. SP-A levels in fetal lungs of untreated baboons were increased 16- to 20-fold between d 100 and d 165–175 of gestation in untreated baboons and baboons treated with CGS 20267 or CGS 20267 and estrogen. Similarly, SP-B levels in fetal lungs of untreated baboons were increased 10-fold between d 100 and d 165–175 of gestation in untreated baboons and baboons treated with CGS 20267 or CGS 20267 and estrogen. Moreover, in estrogen-suppressed baboons, as in untreated animals, the fetal lung continued to grow and exhibited normal alveolarization on histology. We conclude that development of the primate fetal lung can occur in utero in baboons in which fetal serum cortisol levels have been suppressed by the relative absence of estrogen perhaps because of the ability of the lung to coordinate local production of cortisol.

This work was supported by NIH Research Grant R01 HD-13294 and HL-19737.

Abbreviations: 11ß-HSD, 11ß-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase; CBG, corticosteroid-binding globulin; SP, surfactant protein; TCA, trichloroacetic acid.




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