| Literature DB >> 35261925 |
Junaid Kashir1,2, Durga Ganesh3,4, Celine Jones3, Kevin Coward3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oocyte activation deficiency (OAD) is attributed to the majority of cases underlying failure of ICSI cycles, the standard treatment for male factor infertility. Oocyte activation encompasses a series of concerted events, triggered by sperm-specific phospholipase C zeta (PLCζ), which elicits increases in free cytoplasmic calcium (Ca2+) in spatially and temporally specific oscillations. Defects in this specific pattern of Ca2+ release are directly attributable to most cases of OAD. Ca2+ release can be clinically mediated via assisted oocyte activation (AOA), a combination of mechanical, electrical and/or chemical stimuli which artificially promote an increase in the levels of intra-cytoplasmic Ca2+. However, concerns regarding safety and efficacy underlie potential risks that must be addressed before such methods can be safely widely used. OBJECTIVE AND RATIONALE: Recent advances in current AOA techniques warrant a review of the safety and efficacy of these practices, to determine the extent to which AOA may be implemented in the clinic. Importantly, the primary challenges to obtaining data on the safety and efficacy of AOA must be determined. Such questions require urgent attention before widespread clinical utilization of such protocols can be advocated. SEARCHEntities:
Keywords: ICSI; assisted oocyte activation (AOA); calcium; calcium ionophores; male infertility; oocyte; oocyte activation; oocyte activation deficiency (OAD); phospholipase C zeta (PLCζ); sperm
Year: 2022 PMID: 35261925 PMCID: PMC8894871 DOI: 10.1093/hropen/hoac003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Reprod Open ISSN: 2399-3529
Figure 1.Representative Ca Figure reproduced from Miyazaki (2006) with permission.
Figure 2.Schematic summary of the proposed mechanism underlying Ca The fertilizing sperm triggers Ca2+ following delivery of sperm-specific phospholipase C zeta (PLCζ) to the oolemma during or following oocyte-sperm membrane fusion. PLCζ interacts with an as yet unknown oocyte-borne factor(s), facilitating hydrolysis of PIP2 into DAG and InsP3, which subsequently triggers Ca2+ release from intracellular stores, alleviating the MII-arrest. The proposed mechanism mediates cortical granules exocytosis, MAPK deactivation and subsequent pronuclei formation and CaMKII activation, inhibiting CSF (Emi2) and liberating APC. This reduces levels of Cyclin B1 in the maturation-promoting factor (MPF) complex comprising CDK1 and Cyclin B1, which inactivates MPF, releasing the oocyte from MII-arrest. APC, anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome; CaM/CaMKII, calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; CSF, cytostatic factor; CNB1, cyclin B1; CDK1, cyclin-dependent kinase 1; DAG, diacylglycerol; InsP3, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate; InsP3R, InsP3 receptor; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; PIP2, phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate; PKC, protein kinase C. Schematic reproduced with permission from Yeste .
Figure 3.Schematic representation of the purported mechanisms underlying the three most commonly applied methods of assisted oocyte activation. (a) Mechanical activation usually involves a disruption of the plasma membrane and/or components within the oolemma, leading to an elevation of Ca2+ within the oocyte due to influx of Ca2+ and/or disruption of Ca2+ store membranes such as the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). (b) The mechanisms underlying chemical activation vary on the type of agent utilized, but usually involve the facilitated transport of extracellular Ca2+ into the oocyte either directly or via transport channels. (c) Electrical activation involves generation of pores within the oocyte membrane via application of varying electrical fields, allowing extracellular Ca2+ influx into the oolemma.
A comparative overview of study design and outcomes of AOA protocols using various chemical activators.
| Endpoint type | Study type (AOA stimulus) | Fertilized oocytes (Total) | Experimental group (Total) | Control group | Primary findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacy |
Retrospective ( | Undisclosed |
History of severe teratozoospermia or previous ICSI failure ( | Standard ICSI | Rates of fertilization and transferable embryos increased with AOA |
|
| Safety |
Retrospective ( |
( |
Matched with controls for: - Female/male age - Female BMI - Duration of infertility number of transferred embryos (total and per cycle) - Type of embryo transferred (cleavage embryo and blastocyst), - Endometrial thickness on embryo transfer day - Type of endometrial preparation - Causes of infertility ( | Standard ICSI |
Rates of: - Biochemical pregnancy - Clinical pregnancy, - Implantation - Miscarriage, - Ectopic pregnancy - Multiple pregnancy - live births Not significantly increased |
|
| Safety |
Retrospective ( |
( |
History of teratozoospermia, severe male fertility or sperm obtained via testicular sperm extraction ( | Standard ICSI |
Rates of: - Abortion, - Major birth defects - Developmental retardation Not significantly increased |
|
| Efficacy |
Prospective, Multi-Centre ( |
( |
History of ICSI or low fertilization rate. ( | Standard ICSI—split by sibling oocytes | Fertilization rates in patients with low fertilization history not always increased, even upon pre-screening for OAD. |
|
| Safety |
Retrospective ( |
( |
No fertility history ( | Natural conception | No intellectual or language disabilities identified in AOA children |
|
| Safety |
Retrospective ( |
( |
History of total ICSI failure, near total ICSI failure, or globozoospermia ( | Natural conception | Cognitive, language, motor development and behaviour within general population standards |
|
| Safety |
Prospective ( |
( |
History of poor sperm quality, female factor infertility, or idiopathic infertility ( | None | Congenital malformations detected in 6.3% of children born following ionomycin treatment. |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
( |
History of ICSI or low fertilization rate due to poor sperm quality. ( | Standard ICSI from previous cycles |
Fertilization and pregnancy rates back to normal. No detectable minor or major congenital defects in babies. |
|
| Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
( |
No history of ICSI failure ( | ICSI with activation- capable (control) or activation-deficient sperm |
Mice and human oocytes responded differently to the two ionophores. Mouse oocyte activation and blastulation higher using ionomycin compared to A23187. Neither ionophore restored normal fertilization rates in human |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
( |
History of ICSI failure or low fertilization rate ( | Standard ICSI |
Both improved fertilization rates Neither increased - Pregnancy - Implantation - Miscarriage Children had no congenital/cognitive abnormalities compared to controls. |
|
| Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
( |
History of infertility with 99%-100% abnormal sperm morphology ( |
Standard AOA with Ionomycin ( |
Ionomycin alone gave higher rates of oocyte activation compared to Ionomycin and SrCl2 Treatment with SrCl2 improved embryo quality rather than with just Ionomycin. |
|
| Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
( |
No fertility history ( | Standard ICSI |
No improvement in fertilization or cleavage rates Increased rates of high-quality embryogenesis (from both fresh and vitrified oocytes). |
|
| Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
Originally failed to mature, were vitrified, and then matured ( |
No fertility history ( | Standard ICSI | Significantly improved high-quality embryo and blastocyst formation rates from vitrified oocytes to those comparable to fresh oocytes. |
|
AOA, artificial oocyte activation; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor; OAD, oocyte activation deficiency.
An overview of study design and outcomes of AOA protocols utilizing A23187, CultActive and protocols supplemented with GM-CSF.
| Endpoint type | Study type | Fertilized oocytes (Total) | Experimental group (Population) | Control group | Primary findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
( |
No fertility history ( | Standard ICSI |
Improved fertilization rate. Cleavage score and embryo quality remained unchanged. |
|
| Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
( |
History of globozoospermia ( | None | Treatment successfully produced live births for males with globozoospermia. |
|
| Safety |
Retrospective ( |
( |
History of ICSI failure or low fertilization rate without oocyte abnormality ( | Standard ICSI |
No increase in: - Foetal defects including structural or chromosomal malformations) - Unhealthy newborns - First and second trimester abortions - Intrauterine foetal death - Ectopic/chemical pregnancies - Gestational age - Birth weight - Newborn gender |
|
| Safety |
Prospective ( |
( |
Endometriosis, male factor, tubal, or idiopathic aetiologies of infertility ( | IVF |
No increase in number of chromosome segregation errors in meiosis II. Evidence suggested affected second polar body extrusion. |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Retrospective, Case-control ( |
( |
History of ICSI failure or low fertilization rate ( | Standard ICSI from previous cycles |
Improved fertilization rates No change in: - Cleavage rates - Number of live births. - Abortion rates - Congenital anomalies |
|
| Safety |
Retrospective ( |
( |
History of total or near total ICSI failure ( | None |
All AOA-born children presented normal: - Physical and mental development - Normal chromosome ploidy No increase in genetic variations or chromosomal alterations |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Unblinded Clinical Trial ( |
( |
Teratozoospermia ( | Standard ICSI |
No change in rates of: - Implantation - Fertilization - Pregnancy rates - Multiple pregnancies - Spontaneous abortion |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Retrospective ( |
( |
History of ICSI failure or low fertilization rate ( | Standard ICSI from previous cycles |
Improved fertilization and implantation rates No congenital birth defects observed. |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Retrospective ( |
( |
History of ICSI failure or low fertilization rate. ( | Standard ICSI from previous cycles |
Improved rates of: - Fertilization, - Implantation and pregnancy No change in: - Abortion rates - Birth weight - Malformation rates |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
Aged, unfertilized oocytes post-ICSI (
|
No fertility history ( | Standard ICSI |
Standard AOA resulted in chromosomal abnormalities in all embryos Supplementation with GM-CSF improved rates of: - Activation - Cleavage - High quality embryos - Embryo development - Blastulation 62.5% GM-CSF supplemented embryos were chromosomally normal. |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Prospective, Retrospective, Multi-Center ( |
( |
Low oocyte count, OAT, or frozen sperm ( | Standard ICSI | Improved fertilization and pregnancy rates, and comparable embryogenesis. |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Prospective, Single Blind ( |
( |
History of low fertilization and teratozoospermia ( | Standard ICSI and split by sibling oocytes | No improvement in fertilization rates and impeded embryogenesis quality. |
|
| Efficacy |
Prospective ( |
( |
History of ICSI failure. Fresh or frozen sperm obtained via testicular sperm extraction ( | Standard ICSI from previous cycles |
Successful: - Pronuclei production and fusion - Cleaved blastomeric stage transition - Progressive embryogenesis |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Prospective, Multi-Center ( |
( |
History of ICSI failure ( | Standard ICSI from previous cycles |
Improved rates of: - Fertilization - Implantation - Pregnancy No change in: - Embryo quality - Rates of malformation. |
|
| Safety and Efficacy |
Prospective, Multi-Center ( |
( |
History of ICSI failure or low fertilization rate ( | Standard ICSI from previous cycles |
Improved rates of: - Fertilization - Implantation - Pregnancy No change in: - Embryo quality - Rates of malformation. |
|
AOA, artificial oocyte activation; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor; IMSI, intra-cytoplasmic morphologically selected sperm injections; OAT, oligoasthenoteratozoospermia.
Figure 4.Representative Ca. Treatment with (a) A23187, (b) 7% ethanol and (c) thimerosal. Figure reproduced from Nakada and Mizuno (1998) with permission.