Proteome analysis of endometrial tissue from patients with PCOS reveals proteins predicted to impact the disease.

Mol Biol Rep

Department of Molecular Systems Biology, Cell Science Research Center, Royan Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Technology, ACECR, Banihashem Sq., Banihashem St., Ressalat highway, P.O. Box: 16635-148, 1665659911, Tehran, Iran.

Published: November 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) affects about 10% of women of reproductive age, leading to infertility, and the study investigates proteins that may cause issues with endometrial receptivity in these patients.
  • Researchers used a shotgun proteomics approach to compare the endometrial protein profiles of PCOS patients during the luteal phase with those of healthy individuals, finding 150 proteins with higher abundance and 46 with lower abundance in PCOS patients.
  • The study reveals significant metabolic and protein imbalances in the endometrial tissue of PCOS patients, which may hinder implantation and reproductive success, though further research is needed to confirm these findings on a larger scale.*

Article Abstract

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a complex disease that causes an ovulatory infertility in approximately 10% of reproductive-age women. We searched for candidate proteins that might contribute to endometrial receptivity defects in PCOS patients, and result in adverse reproductive outcomes. Shotgun proteomics approach was used to investigate the proteome profile of the endometrium at the luteal phase in PCOS patients compared to healthy fertile individuals. Biological process and pathway analyses were conducted to categorize the proteins with differential expressions. Confirmation was performed for a number of proteins via immunoblotting in new samples. 150 proteins with higher abundance, and 46 proteins with lower abundance were identified in the endometrial tissue from PCOS patients compared to healthy fertile individuals. The proteins with higher abundance were enriched in protein degradation, cell cycle, and signaling cascades. Proteins with lower abundance in PCOS patients were enriched in extracellular matrix (ECM) composition and function, as well as the salvage pathway of purine biosynthesis. Metabolism was the most affected biological process with over 100 up-regulated, and approximately 30 down-regulated proteins. Our results indicate significant imbalances in metabolism, proteasome, cell cycle, ECM related proteins, and signaling cascades in endometrial tissue of PCOS, which may contribute to poor reproductive outcomes in these patients. We postulate that the endometria in PCOS patients may not be well-differentiated and synchronized for implantation. Possible roles of the above-mentioned pathways that underlie implantation failure in PCOS will be discussed. Our findings need to be confirmed in larger populations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11033-020-05924-3DOI Listing

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