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Rescue of follicle development after oocyte-induced ovary dysfunction and infertility in a model of POI. | LitMetric

Rescue of follicle development after oocyte-induced ovary dysfunction and infertility in a model of POI.

Front Cell Dev Biol

Nuffield Department of Women's and Reproductive Health, Women's Centre, John Radcliffe Hospital, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) and its unclear mechanisms, using a mouse model to show that oocyte deletion impacts follicle development.
  • Analysis of DM mice at various developmental stages reveals a blockage in follicle progress, with findings indicating that intra-ovarian factors play a crucial role in the onset of POI.
  • Transplanting DM ovaries did not restore normal development, but modifying ovarian somatic cells allowed for some progression, highlighting the importance of oocyte and somatic cell communication in follicle development.

Article Abstract

The mechanisms and aetiology underlying the development of premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) are poorly understood. However, the oocyte clearly has a role as demonstrated by the Double Mutant (DM) mouse model where ovarian dysfunction (6 weeks) is followed by POI (3 months) due to oocyte-specific deletion of complex and hybrid N- and O-glycans. The ovaries of DM mice contain more primary follicles (3a stage) accompanied by fewer developing follicles, indicating a block in follicle development. To investigate this block, we first analysed early follicle development in postnatal (8-day), pre-pubertal (3-week) and post-pubertal (6-week and 3-month) DM ( :ZP3) and Control ( ) mice. Second, we investigated if transplantation of DM ovaries into a "normal" endocrine environment would restore follicle development. Third, we determined if replacing DM ovarian somatic cells would rescue development of DM oocytes. At 3-week, DM primary 3a follicles contain large oocytes accompanied by early development of a second GC layer and increased GC proliferation. At 6-week, DM primary 3a follicles contain abnormally large oocytes, accompanied with decreased GC proliferation. Transplantation of DM ovaries into a 'normal' endocrine environment did not restore normal follicle development. However, replacing somatic cells by generating reaggregated ovaries (ROs) did enable follicle development to progress and thus highlighted intra-ovarian factors were responsible for the onset of POI in DM females. Thus, these studies demonstrate oocyte-initiated altered communication between GCs and oocytes results in abnormal primary follicles which fail to progress and leads to POI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10443433PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2023.1202411DOI Listing

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