Ovarian Structure-Function: Influence of Androgen and Diet

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P50 · $176,864 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

SUMMARY Elevated circulating androgen (testosterone; T) and a typical high-fat western-style diet (WSD) are associated with the development of female reproductive disorders, such as polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) and reduced fertility. Although the underlying etiology of reproductive dysfunction in PCOS likely includes altered in utero programming and genetic contributions, the pathophysiology of exposure to elevated T at PCOS levels of hyperandrogenemia, WSD, or their combined effects on female fertility is poorly understood, particularly in primates. The current NCTRI established that chronic T and/or WSD treatment beginning just prior to puberty in a nonhuman primate model negatively affects reproductive processes critical for fertility. Through 4 years of treatment, significant effects of T and/or WSD were noted relative to untreated controls in terms of ovarian function, including: the appearance and persistence of numerous small antral follicles typical of a “polycystic” ovarian morphology, reduced ovarian vascular function and luteal progesterone synthesis, altered perivoulatory follicle gene expression, and the presence of degenerated oocytes within the naturally-selected, single ovulatory follicle. Even if the oocyte from T and/or WSD-treated animals appeared healthy and meiotically mature, it often showed abnormal cell division kinetics after fertilization. These ovarian defects correlated with fertility outcomes since exposure to T delayed the time to pregnancy, whereas WSD, particularly in combination with T, reduced overall fertility and led to abnormal, nonviable pregnancies. WSD- treated animals that failed to become pregnant exhibited the greatest level of pre-pregnancy and pregnancy associated metabolic abnormalities, including increased insulin resistance. Although prepubertal exposure to T and/or WSD significantly affected ovarian processes and fertility relative to controls, treatment did not impact all animals equally and many continued menstrual cyclicity. Thus, studies are proposed in this NCTRI renewal (Project II) to determine whether continued T and/or WSD treatment worsens ovarian dysfunction and if treatment removal restores ovarian physiology, oocyte/embryo quality and fertility. Experiments will continue during 7 years of T and/or WSD treatment to assess their effects on ovarian follicle growth and development, intrafollicular events necessary for ovulation, luteal progesterone synthesis, and ovarian vascular function, relative to controls (Aim 1). The impact of continued T and/or WSD treatment on oocyte health, fertilization, expression of certain epigenetic factors important for the oocyte-to-embryo transition, as well as embryonic development and chromosomal integrity will also be assessed (Aim 2). After 7 years, T and WSD treatments will cease to determine if ovarian function and oocyte/embryo health is restored (Aim 3) similar to what is observed in age-matched controls. Continued treatment and cessation on ov...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10136650
Project number
5P50HD071836-09
Recipient
OREGON HEALTH & SCIENCE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Jon D Hennebold
Activity code
P50
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$176,864
Award type
5
Project period
2013-04-01 → 2023-03-31