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Cellular Stress Causes Reversible, PRKAA1/2-, and Proteasome-dependent ID2 Protein Loss in Trophoblast Stem Cells

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Journal Reproduction
Date 2010 Sep 30
PMID 20876741
Citations 29
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Abstract

Stress reduces fertility, but the mechanisms mediating this are not understood. For a successful pregnancy, placental trophoblast stem cells (TSCs) in the implanting embryo proliferate and then a subpopulation differentiates to produce hormones. Normally, differentiation occurs when inhibitor of differentiation 2 (ID2) protein is lost in human and mouse placental stem cells. We hypothesize that stress enzyme-dependent differentiation occurs in association with insufficient TSC accumulation. We studied a well-defined model where TSC differentiation requires ID2 loss. The loss of ID2 derepresses the promoter of chorionic somatomammotropin hormone 1 (CSH1), the first hormone after implantation. Csh1 mRNA is known to be induced in stressed TSCs. In this study, we demonstrate that AMP-activated protein kinase (PRKAA1/2, aka AMPK) mediates the stress-induced proteasome-dependent loss of ID2 at high stress levels. At very low stress levels, PRKAA1/2 mediates metabolic adaptation exemplified by the inactivation of acetyl coA carboxylase by phosphorylation without ID2 loss. At the highest stress levels, irreversible TSC differentiation as defined by ID2 loss and slower cell accumulation occurs. However, lower stress levels lead to reversible differentiation accompanied by metabolic adaptation. These data support the hypothesis that PRKAA1/2 mediates preparation for differentiation that is induced by stress at levels where a significant decrease in cell accumulation occurs. This supports the interpretation that enzyme-mediated increases in differentiation may compensate when insufficient numbers of stem cells accumulate.

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