| Literature DB >> 35897783 |
Shota Yamamoto1,2, Hiroki Noguchi1, Asuka Takeda1, Ryosuke Arakaki1, Maimi Uchishiba1, Junki Imaizumi1, Saki Minato1, Shuhei Kamada1, Tomohiro Kagawa1, Atsuko Yoshida1, Takako Kawakita1, Yuri Yamamoto1, Kanako Yoshida1, Masafumi Kon2, Nobuo Shinohara2, Takeshi Iwasa1.
Abstract
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is frequently seen in females of reproductive age and is associated with metabolic disorders that are exacerbated by obesity. Although body weight reduction programs via diet and lifestyle changes are recommended for modifying reproductive and metabolic phenotypes, the drop-out rate is high. Thus, an efficacious, safe, and continuable treatment method is needed. Recent studies have shown that oxytocin (OT) reduces body weight gain and food intake, and promotes lipolysis in some mammals, including humans (especially obese individuals), without any adverse effects. In the present study, we evaluated the changes in endogenous OT levels, and the effects of acute and chronic OT administration on body weight changes, food intake, and fat mass using novel dihydrotestosterone-induced PCOS model rats. We found that the serum OT level was lower in PCOS model rats than in control rats, whereas the hypothalamic OT mRNA expression level did not differ between them. Acute intraperitoneal administration of OT during the dark phase reduced the body weight gain and food intake in PCOS model rats, but these effects were not observed in control rats. In contrast, chronic administration of OT decreased the food intake in both the PCOS model rats and control rats. These findings indicate that OT may be a candidate medicine that is efficacious, safe, and continuable for treating obese PCOS patients.Entities:
Keywords: DHT; PCOS; body weight; food intake; metabolic; oxytocin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35897783 PMCID: PMC9330807 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23158207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1(A) Body weight, (B) body weight change (% initial body weight), (C) cumulative food intake, (D) feed efficiency, (E) subcutaneous fat weight (g/100 g body weight), (F) visceral fat weight (g/100 g body weight), and (G) total fat weight (g/100 g body weight) in the PCOS (■) and Control (□) groups. Data are expressed as the means ± SEM. ** p < 0.01.
Figure 2(A) The estrous cycle of two representative rats: D, diestrus; M, metestrus; E, estrus; P, proestrus. (B) Representative ovarian morphology. (C) The number of estrous stages, ovarian weight, and uterine weight in the PCOS (■) and Control (□) groups. Data are expressed as the means ± SEM. ** p < 0.01.
Figure 3The serum oxytocin (OT) levels, the hypothalamic mRNA expression levels of OT, oxytocin receptor (OTR), neuropeptide Y (NPY), agouti-related protein (AgRP), pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) and prepro-orexin (pporexin), and the visceral mRNA levels of OTR in the PCOS and Control groups. Data are expressed as the means ± SEM. * p < 0.05.
Figure 4The body weight change and food intake after acute saline (□) or oxytocin (OT; ■) administration during the light phase (A) or the dark phase (B) in the PCOS and Control groups. Data are expressed as the means ± SEM. * p < 0.05.
Figure 5Body weight change (% initial body weight) and cumulative food intake during the 7 days of saline (○) or oxytocin (●) administration in the PCOS and Control groups. Saline was intraperitoneally injected in the saline groups, and oxytocin (1200 μg/kg) was intraperitoneally injected in the oxytocin groups at 2 h before the dark phase. Data are expressed as the means ± SEM. ** p < 0.01.
Primer sequences, product sizes, and annealing temperatures.
| Primer | Sequence | Annealing T (°C) |
|---|---|---|
| OT forward | GAA CAC CAA CGC CAT GGC CTG CCC | 62 |
| OT reverse | TCG GTG CGG CAG CCA TCC GGG CTA | |
| OTR forward | CGA TTG CTG GGC GGT CTT | 67 |
| OTR reverse | CCG CCG CTG CCG TCT TGA | |
| NPY forward | GGG GCT GTG TGG ACT GAC CCT | 66 |
| NPY reverse | GAT GTA GTG TCG CAG AGC GGA G | |
| AgRP forward | TGA AGA AGA CAG CAG CAG ACC | 63 |
| AgRP reverse | AAG GTA CCT GTT GTC CCAAGC | |
| POMC forward | CCT CAC CAC GGA AAG CA | 66 |
| POMC reverse | TCA AGG GCT GTT CAT CTC C | |
| pporexin forward | GCC GTC TCT ACG AAC TGT TG | 60 |
| pporexin reverse | CGA GGA GAG GGG AAA GTT AG | |
| GAPDH forward | ATG GCA CAG TCAAGG CTG AGA | 70 |
| GAPDH reverse | CGC TCC TG GAA GAT GGT GAT | |
| 18S rRNA forward | GAC GGA CCA GAG CGA AAG C | 64 |
| 18S rRNA reverse | AAC CTC CGA CTT TCG TTC TTG A |