
Lubahn DB, Moyer JS, Golding TS, Couse JF, Korach KS, Smithies O:
Alteration of reproductive function but not prenatal sexual
development after insertional disruption of the mouse estrogen
receptor gene.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of
America 1993 Dec 1;90(23):11162-6
ABSTRACT
Estrogen receptor and its ligand, estradiol, have long been thought
to be essential for survival, fertility, and female sexual
differentiation and development. Consistent with this proposed
crucial role, no human estrogen receptor gene mutations are known,
unlike the androgen receptor, where many loss of function mutations
have been found. We have generated mutant mice lacking
responsiveness to estradiol by disrupting the estrogen receptor gene
by gene targeting. Both male and female animals survive to adulthood
with normal gross external phenotypes. Females are infertile; males
have a decreased fertility. Females have hypoplastic uteri and
hyperemic ovaries with no detectable corpora lutea. In adult
wild-type and heterozygous females, 3-day estradiol treatment at 40
micrograms/kg stimulates a 3- to 4-fold increase in uterine wet
weight and alters vaginal cornification, but the uteri and vagina do
not respond in the animals with the estrogen receptor gene
disruption. Prenatal male and female reproductive tract development
can therefore occur in the absence of estradiol receptor-mediated
responsiveness.