| Literature DB >> 18456904 |
A I Qureshi1, S S Nussey, G Bano, P Musonda, S A Whitehead, H D Mason.
Abstract
Histological studies have demonstrated that polycystic ovaries (PCO) contain increased numbers of preantral follicles with a specific increase in primary follicles. Polycystic ovary syndrome is associated with hyperandrogenism and pre- and postnatal androgenization of primates increases the pool of growing follicles producing changes resembling PCO. In vitro studies could test the hypothesis that androgens alter early folliculogenesis, but conventional culture techniques for small follicles are generally unsuitable in non-rodent species. Our objective was to develop and use a method to investigate the effects of testosterone on early folliculogenesis. We adapted an in ovo technique in which lamb cortical ovarian fragments were grafted onto the chorioallantoic membrane of fertilised chick eggs. Optimal experimental conditions for vascularisation and survival of tissue were determined and the model then used to investigate the effects of testosterone on follicle growth. Eggs were inoculated with testosterone at the time of implantation of the ovarian tissue, which was retrieved 5 days later. Tissue was sectioned and follicles staged and counted. There was no wholesale initiation of primordial follicle growth over the 5-day in ovo culture. Importantly, the proportion of primordial, primary and secondary follicles remained similar to those in unimplanted tissue. Testosterone increased the number of primary follicles by 50% compared with controls, an effect that was largely due to a reduction in atresia. In conclusion, incubation of ovarian cortex with testosterone reproduces the changes in early folliculogenesis reported in histological studies of PCO.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18456904 PMCID: PMC2754341 DOI: 10.1530/REP-07-0172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reproduction ISSN: 1470-1626 Impact factor: 3.906
Figure 1(A–E) Variation in macroscopic vascularisation of tissue recovered 5 days after implantation. Figures in parentheses indicate the frequency with which each degree of vascularisation was found. (A) Non-vascularised tissue usually retrieved from the albumen or yolk or on the shell or vitelline membranes or amnion (24%). (B) Poorly vascularised tissue encapsulated by the CAM with obvious blood vessels but ovarian tissue pale in colour (18%). (C) Partly-vascularised tissue that was pink in isolated areas (22%). (D) Well-vascularised tissue that was mostly pink (28%) and (E) very well-vascularised tissue that was pink throughout (8%). (F–I) Histological sections of a primordial (F), primary (G) and secondary (H) follicles in lamb ovarian cortical tissue cultured using the CAM technique. Nucleated chick red blood cells (arrows) are clearly seen infiltrating the ovarian tissue. An atretic follicle is illustrated in (I).
Numbers of embryos and well-vascularised pieces of tissue retrieved and used for comparison. In the first two columns, the figures in parentheses show the percentages. The last four columns show the total number of follicles found of each stage for each treatment. Numbers in parentheses show straight and weighted percentages.
| Unimplanted | 401 (74/76) | 77 (15/15) | 4 (1/1) | 44 (11/8) | ||
| Implanted control | 13 (52) | 3 (50) | 266 (68/69) | 56 (15/15) | 6 (2/2) | 58 (15/15) |
| Testosterone | 13 (52) | 3 (60) | 575 (56/73) | 158 (22/20) | 6 (1/1) | 44 (22/6) |
| Testosterone+FSH | 14 (56) | 4 (67) | 302 (59/67) | 114 (30/25) | 5 (2/1) | 30 (10/7) |
| FSH | 12 (48) | 4 (57) | 62 (230/65) | 76 (23/22) | 6 (4/2) | 40 (13/11) |
Figure 2The proportion of atretic and healthy follicles of different stages in each group of baseline or implanted pieces of tissue (weighted mean±s.e.m.). There was a significant decrease in the proportion of primordial follicles and an increase in atresia when tissue was implanted (P=0.014 and 0.002 respectively). The proportion of primary follicles was increased in those pieces exposed to androgen in the absence (P=0.019) or presence (P<0.001) of FSH. There was a highly significant corresponding reduction in atresia in each case (P<0.001). FSH also increased primary follicle numbers (P=0.013), but there was no change in the proportion of atretic follicles with this hormone.