Constitutively Active STAT5b Feminizes Mouse Liver Gene Expression

Endocrinology. 2022 May 1;163(5):bqac046. doi: 10.1210/endocr/bqac046.

Abstract

STAT5 is an essential transcriptional regulator of the sex-biased actions of GH in the liver. Delivery of constitutively active STAT5 (STAT5CA) to male mouse liver using an engineered adeno-associated virus with high tropism for the liver is shown to induce widespread feminization of the liver, with extensive induction of female-biased genes and repression of male-biased genes, largely mimicking results obtained when male mice are given GH as a continuous infusion. Many of the STAT5CA-responding genes were associated with nearby (< 50 kb) sites of STAT5 binding to liver chromatin, supporting the proposed direct role of persistently active STAT5 in continuous GH-induced liver feminization. The feminizing effects of STAT5CA were dose-dependent; moreover, at higher levels, STAT5CA overexpression resulted in some histopathology, including hepatocyte hyperplasia, and increased karyomegaly and multinuclear hepatocytes. These findings establish that the persistent activation of STAT5 by GH that characterizes female liver is by itself sufficient to account for the sex-dependent expression of a majority of hepatic sex-biased genes. Moreover, histological changes seen when STAT5CA is overexpressed highlight the importance of carefully evaluating such effects before considering STAT5 derivatives for therapeutic use in treating liver disease.

Keywords: JAK-STAT; STAT5 knockout; liver sex differences; pituitary GH secretion profiles.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Female
  • Feminization*
  • Gene Expression
  • Growth Hormone / metabolism
  • Hepatocytes / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Liver / metabolism
  • Male
  • Mice
  • Milk Proteins / genetics
  • Milk Proteins / metabolism
  • Milk Proteins / pharmacology
  • STAT5 Transcription Factor* / genetics
  • STAT5 Transcription Factor* / metabolism

Substances

  • Milk Proteins
  • STAT5 Transcription Factor
  • STAT5B protein, human
  • Stat5b protein, mouse
  • Growth Hormone