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COMMENTARY |
Department of Medicine (J.-P.B.), Division of Endocrinology, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada J1H SN4; and Departments of Medicine and Obstetrics and Gynecology (J.E.N.), Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia 23298-0111
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Jean-Patrice Baillargeon, M.D., M.Sc., Division of Endocrinology, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada J1H 5N4. E-mail: jp.baillargeon{at}USherbrooke.ca.
| Introduction |
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| Ovarian Androgen Production and in Vitro Insulin Action |
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LH enhances theca cell steroidogenesis mostly through the cAMP-protein kinase A pathway. The molecular mechanism by which insulin regulates steroidogenesis is less well understood, but it has clearly been shown that insulin acts through its own receptor (3). In classical insulin-responsive tissues, insulins actions are mediated via three major pathways: the phosphatidyl-inositol 3-kinase (PI-3K) pathway, implicated in the metabolic effects of insulin; the MAPK pathway, responsible for the mitogenic effects of insulin; and the protein kinase C (PKC) pathway, which can also be activated via G protein activation of phospholipase C.
Because LH and insulin act physiologically via distinct intracellular signaling mechanisms, their synergistic enhancement of theca cell steroidogenesis likely entails important interactions between pathways of these two respective hormone. Indeed, it has been shown that insulin significantly increases LH-driven cAMP accumulation in theca cells (5). This insulin-stimulated increase in cAMP could be induced through PI-3K and/or PKC (6, 7) but probably not via the MAPK pathway (7). These observations provide a molecular basis to the hypothesis of significant cross talk between the LH and insulin signaling pathways and support the possibility of a defect in women with PCOS affecting both insulin and LH-stimulated ovarian androgen production as well as synergistic responses.
| Hyperandrogenemia in PCOS and in Vivo Insulin Action |
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To control for chronic stimulation by LH, normal and PCOS women were challenged with human chorionic gonadotropin before and 4 wk after LH suppression with a long-acting analog of GnRH (8). Suppression of LH did not alter the typical exaggerated plasma 17
-hydroxyprogesterone response to human chorionic gonadotropin. Conversely, serum total and non-SHBG-bound testosterone levels decreased significantly after direct suppression of pancreatic insulin release for 10 d with diazoxide in PCOS women (9). Moreover, reduction of insulinemia with acarbose, which slows down intestinal absorption of carbohydrates, also reduced serum testosterone levels in PCOS (10). These studies all underscore the importance of insulin in the pathogenesis of PCOS.
Numerous studies have demonstrated that any treatment aimed at improving insulin resistance in women with PCOS results in lower androgen levels and improves ovulatory function (1). The exaggerated steroidogenic response to LH stimulation tests also improved (11, 12), suggesting normalization of ovarian androgen hyperresponsiveness.
Finally, we conducted a study using insulin-sensitizing drugs [namely metformin, a biguanine, and rosiglitazone, a peroxisomal proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-
agonist] in nonobese women with PCOS and normal insulin levels (13). The results demonstrated a normalization of serum testosterone levels and ovulation in actively treated groups, compared with placebo. Even if the women were normoinsulinemic at baseline, metformin significantly reduced their insulin levels, but rosiglitazone did not. These findings suggest that some women with PCOS have an increased ovarian sensitivity to insulin without global insulin resistance or hyperinsulinemia. In this case, any reduction in insulin levels (as with metformin) or any direct effect on the ovarian hyperresponsiveness (which may be the case with rosiglitazone) would be beneficial. Rosiglitazone might reduce ovarian androgen hyperresponsiveness through insulin-dependent or insulin-independent mechanisms.
| Selective Defects of Insulin Sensitivity |
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A recent study (17) also highlighted a selective defect in insulin activity in granulosa cells from women with PCOS, i.e. resistance in the metabolic pathway associated with an increase in mitogenic activity. Moreover, the study demonstrated that troglitazone, a PPAR
agonist, can correct this insulin hypersensitivity of the mitogenic pathway along with a significant improvement of the insulin-resistant metabolic pathway. Therefore, these results support the hypothesis that PPAR
may directly improve the ovarian androgen hyperresponsiveness typically observed in PCOS.
Another group of investigators demonstrated that inhibition of the metabolic branch of insulin signaling, by blocking PI-3K, led to an enhanced mitogenic action of insulin in endothelial cells, suggesting significant cross talk between the various pathways of insulin signaling (18). Furthermore, the studies of King and Wakasaki (19) led to the hypothesis that cardiovascular complications of diabetes, for example, result from a decrease in PI-3K pathway activity, which in turn causes a decrease in the antiatherogenic effects of insulin, along with PKC-induced up-regulation of the MAPK pathway, hence resulting in an increase in the atherogenic effects of insulin.
The observation that insulin-signaling pathways may express differential, and even divergent, activity levels under various circumstances supports the possibility of a selective defect of the insulin androgenic pathway in women with PCOS. It is also possible that this defect is associated with or the cause of insulin resistance at its metabolic pathway level, considering the interactions previously noted.
| Hypersensitivity of the Androgen Insulin Signaling Pathway: the Cause of PCOS? |
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In light of these clinical and physiological data, we hypothesize that women develop PCOS in part because of a selective and tissue-specific increase in insulin sensitivity in the ovarian androgenic pathway (i.e. ovarian hypersensitivity to insulin). We propose that this defect is intrinsic and not secondary to chronic stimulation by LH. In a minority of women, this defect is sufficiently severe to cause typical PCOS without insulin resistance. However, it is important to recognize that in most women with PCOS, the severity of the ovarian hypersensitivity is such that the concomitant development of insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia is necessary for phenotypic expression of the syndrome. The ovarian androgen hypersensitivity to insulin could result from up-regulation of the androgenic insulin signaling pathway, up-regulation of IGF-I receptors, decreased ovarian IGF binding protein-1 or SHBG, or other defects that need to be elucidated.
| Conclusion |
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| Footnotes |
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First Published Online November 1, 2005
Abbreviations: PCOS, Polycystic ovary syndrome; PI-3K, phosphatidyl-inositol 3-kinase; PKC, protein kinase C; PPAR, peroxisomal proliferator-activated receptor.
Received August 10, 2005.
Accepted October 18, 2005.
| References |
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-hydroxylase/17,20-lyase (CYP17) genes in porcine theca cells. Endocrinology 141:27352742
-hydroxylase activity is mediated by phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase but not extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1/2 in human ovarian theca cells. Endocrinology 145:175183
-glucosidase inhibitor, in PCOS patients with increased insulin response and normal glucose tolerance. Hum Reprod 16:20662072
activity and serum free testosterone after reduction of insulin secretion in polycystic ovary syndrome. N Engl J Med 335:617623This article has been cited by other articles:
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