| Literature DB >> 26250560 |
Erica Silvestris1, Stella D'Oronzo2, Paola Cafforio3, Giuseppe D'Amato4, Giuseppe Loverro5.
Abstract
Infertility is a medical and social condition that affects millions of women worldwide and is today considered so far as a new disease. A considerable progress has been recently pursued in the field of the reproductive medicine and the infertility treatment may account for novel and modern procedures such as in vitro oocyte fertilization, egg donation, pregnancy surrogacy and preimplantation diagnosis. However, great interest has lately been reserved to the ovarian stem cells (OSCs) whose existence in woman ovaries has been proven. OSCs are thus suitable for developmental studies in infertility and in other clinical applications as endocrine derangements due to premature ovarian failure, or for infertility treatment after cancer chemotherapies, as well as in restoring the hormonal balance in postmenopausal age.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26250560 PMCID: PMC4528806 DOI: 10.1186/s13048-015-0184-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ovarian Res ISSN: 1757-2215 Impact factor: 4.234
Schematic list of major procedures for treatment of infertility
| Indication | Success rate | Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IUI | - Unexplained infertility | variable: ~15-20 % | - Very simple procedure | Virtually no disadvantages |
| Factors reducing the success rate: | ||||
| - High concentration of motile sperms | ||||
| - Older age of the woman | ||||
| - Mild/moderate male infertility | ||||
| - Poor egg quality | ||||
| - Poor sperm quality | ||||
| - Cervical factor infertility | - Severe endometriosis | |||
| - Severe damage to fallopian tubes | ||||
| - Blockage of fallopian tubes | ||||
| - Minimal endometriosis | ||||
| IVF | - Unexplained infertility | ~30 % of all treatment cycles (depending on the age of the woman) | - Treatment of choice with donor eggs | - Multiple pregnancies |
| - Low sperm numbers or motility | ||||
| - Reduce surgery on damages tubes | ||||
| - Infrequent or absent ovulation | ||||
| - Tubal factor infertility | ||||
| - Cervical factor infertility | ||||
| - Immunological factor infertility | ||||
| - OHSS. | ||||
| - Ectopic pregnancy | ||||
| - Moderate or severe endometriosis | - Painful treatment | |||
| - Expensive treatment | ||||
| - Age-related infertility | ||||
| - Failure of other fertility treatments | ||||
| ICSI | - Low numbers of motile sperm | variable: ~8.5 % to 33.5 % (age range between 35 and 44) | - Overcomes male infertility | - Higher risk of miscarriage |
| - Abnormal morphology sperm | ||||
| - Efficient where few eggs are available | ||||
| - High levels of antisperm antibodies | ||||
| - Success depends on different factors (age of female, quality of eggs, sperm, uterus) | ||||
| - Prior or repeated fertilization failure | ||||
| - Limited frozen sperm | ||||
| - Obstruction of the male tract sperm | ||||
| - Painful treatment | ||||
| - Expensive treatment |
IUI Intrauterine insemination, IVF In vitro fertilization, ICSI Intracyplasmatic sperm injection
Fig. 1Structure of human ovary. Left – Schematic representation of the ovarian structure in a woman in reproductive age, showing the evolution of primary follicles to corpora lutea that cyclically occur in the cortex of the organ. Right – The ovarian cortex is the presumable site of the ovarian stem cell location in this ovary preparation after hematoxylin/eosin staining
Molecular markers differentially expressed by OSCs and oocytes. Only few markers are maintained in the differentiating process. The cell membrane isoforms of Ddx-4 and SSEA-4 are detectable on OSCs [12, 15, 17, 23–26]
| Ovarian stem cells | Oocytes |
|---|---|
| Ddx-4 (cell membrane and cytoplasm) | Ddx-4 (cytoplasm) |
| SSEA-4 (cell membrane and cytoplasm) | SSEA-4 (cytoplasm) |
| OCT-4 A and B | OCT-4 B |
| c-kit | c-kit |
| DAZL (nucleus and cytoplasm) | DAZL (cytoplasm) |
| Fragilis | ZP (zona pellucida proteins) |
| CD133 | GDF-9 (growth differentiation factor 9) |
| Stella | NOBOX (newborn ovary hemeobox protein) |
| Nanog | SCP-3 (synaptonemal complex protein 3) |
| Sox-2 | |
| Blimp-1 |
Fig. 2Isolation of OSCs. Representative procedure of OSC separation from ovarian cortex, incubation with rabbit anti-Ddx4 antibody, subsequent incubation with anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with magnetic beads, capture of cells by magnet and further separation through MACS column leading to collection of Ddx4+ cells, detachment form the beads and elution in medium to obtain enriched OSC preparations
Fig. 3Flow cytometry analysis of OSCs. Fluorescence flow cytometry analysis of OSCs before (left) and after (right) the separation by the immunomagnetic procedure. The population was first gated (P4) in relation to the cell size and then assessed in double fluorescence analysis to detect Ddx4 on ovarian cells expressing OCT4A antigen as ontogenetic marker. As shown, the OCT4A+/Ddx4+ cell population was expanded after the immunomagnetic selection (middle), since the Ddx4+ cell population was increased up to 24 % (right) of the original 2 % (left) value in the initial cortical ovarian suspension, with a remarkable fluorescence intensity suggesting the high molecular expression of Ddx4 molecule
Fig. 4Ddx4 localization on immunomagnetic isolated OSC. Confocal microscopy showing a single OSC of small size with large nuclei counterstained by DAPI (C) and few cytoplasm. Ddx4, revealed by FITC (green) in B, localizes in vicinity of the membrane actin (red in A). By merging both FITC and PE, Ddx4 is localized outside of the nucleus and shows high fluorescence intensity. Other nuclei stained by DAPI belong to Ddx4-negative cells within the preparation