TY - JOUR
T1 - Western-style diet, with and without chronic androgen treatment, alters the number, structure, and function of small antral follicles in ovaries of young adult monkeys
AU - Bishop, Cecily V.
AU - Xu, Fuhua
AU - Xu, Jing
AU - Ting, Alison Y.
AU - Galbreath, Etienne
AU - McGee, Whitney K.
AU - Zelinski, Mary B.
AU - Hennebold, Jon D.
AU - Cameron, Judy L.
AU - Stouffer, Richard L.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments: The authors thank the ONPRC Department of Comparative Medicine's Pathology Services Unit for their assistance with obtaining ovaries for these projects; Barbra Mason of the ONPRC Histopathology Morphology Research Core for her paraffin-sectioning expertise; Dr. Jay Wright for donating several antibodies prevalidated in macaque ovarian tissues; Dr. Ov Slayden for use of his microscope to obtain full-scale pictures of H&E-stained rhesus ovaries; and the OHSU Gene Microarray Shared Resource under the direction of Dr. Chris Harrington (Director) for microarray hybridization and providing access to analysis software.
Funding Information:
Funded by National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants P51OD011092 (Oregon National Primate Research Center), R21RR030276 (J.L.C.), U54HD071836 and P50HD071836 (R.L.S.), T32HD07133 (W.K.M.), and K12HD043488 (J.X.).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Society for Reproductive Medicine.
PY - 2016/4/1
Y1 - 2016/4/1
N2 - Objective To examine the small antral follicle (SAF) cohort in ovaries of adult rhesus monkeys after consumption of a Western-style diet (WSD), with or without chronically elevated androgen levels since before puberty. Design Cholesterol or T (n = 6 per group) implants were placed SC in female rhesus macaques beginning at 1 year of age (prepubertal), with addition of a WSD (high fat/fructose) at 5.5 years (menarche approximately 2.6 years). Ovaries were collected at 7 years of age. One ovary per female was embedded in paraffin for morphologic and immunohistochemical analyses. The SAFs (<2.5 mm) were dissected from the other ovary obtained at or near menses in a subgroup of females (n = 3 per group) and processed for microarray analyses of the SAF transcriptome. Ovaries of adult monkeys consuming a standard macaque diet (low in fats and sugars) were obtained at similar stages of the menstrual cycle and used as controls for all analyses. Setting Primate research center. Animal(s) Adult, female rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Intervention(s) None. Main Outcome Measures Histologic analyses, SAF counts and morphology, protein localization and abundance in SAFs, transcriptome in SAFs (messenger RNAs [mRNAs]). Result(s) Compared with controls, consumption of a WSD, with and without T treatment, increased the numbers of SAFs per ovary, owing to the presence of more atretic follicles. Numbers of granulosa cells expressing cellular proliferation markers (pRb and pH3) was greater in healthy SAFs, whereas numbers of cells expressing the cell cycle inhibitor (p21) was higher in atretic SAFs. Intense CYP17A1 staining was observed in the theca cells of SAFs from WSD with or without T groups, compared with controls. Microarray analyses of the transcriptome in SAFs isolated from WSD and WSD plus T-treated females and controls consuming a standard diet identified 1,944 genes whose mRNA levels changed twofold or more among the three groups. Further analyses identified several gene pathways altered by WSD and/or WSD plus T associated with steroid, carbohydrate, and lipid metabolism, plus ovarian processes. Alterations in levels of several SAF mRNAs are similar to those observed in follicular cells from women with polycystic ovary syndrome. Conclusion(s) These data indicate that consumption of a WSD high in fats and sugars in the presence and absence of chronically elevated T alters the structure and function of SAFs within primate ovaries.
AB - Objective To examine the small antral follicle (SAF) cohort in ovaries of adult rhesus monkeys after consumption of a Western-style diet (WSD), with or without chronically elevated androgen levels since before puberty. Design Cholesterol or T (n = 6 per group) implants were placed SC in female rhesus macaques beginning at 1 year of age (prepubertal), with addition of a WSD (high fat/fructose) at 5.5 years (menarche approximately 2.6 years). Ovaries were collected at 7 years of age. One ovary per female was embedded in paraffin for morphologic and immunohistochemical analyses. The SAFs (<2.5 mm) were dissected from the other ovary obtained at or near menses in a subgroup of females (n = 3 per group) and processed for microarray analyses of the SAF transcriptome. Ovaries of adult monkeys consuming a standard macaque diet (low in fats and sugars) were obtained at similar stages of the menstrual cycle and used as controls for all analyses. Setting Primate research center. Animal(s) Adult, female rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Intervention(s) None. Main Outcome Measures Histologic analyses, SAF counts and morphology, protein localization and abundance in SAFs, transcriptome in SAFs (messenger RNAs [mRNAs]). Result(s) Compared with controls, consumption of a WSD, with and without T treatment, increased the numbers of SAFs per ovary, owing to the presence of more atretic follicles. Numbers of granulosa cells expressing cellular proliferation markers (pRb and pH3) was greater in healthy SAFs, whereas numbers of cells expressing the cell cycle inhibitor (p21) was higher in atretic SAFs. Intense CYP17A1 staining was observed in the theca cells of SAFs from WSD with or without T groups, compared with controls. Microarray analyses of the transcriptome in SAFs isolated from WSD and WSD plus T-treated females and controls consuming a standard diet identified 1,944 genes whose mRNA levels changed twofold or more among the three groups. Further analyses identified several gene pathways altered by WSD and/or WSD plus T associated with steroid, carbohydrate, and lipid metabolism, plus ovarian processes. Alterations in levels of several SAF mRNAs are similar to those observed in follicular cells from women with polycystic ovary syndrome. Conclusion(s) These data indicate that consumption of a WSD high in fats and sugars in the presence and absence of chronically elevated T alters the structure and function of SAFs within primate ovaries.
KW - Androgen
KW - Western-style diet
KW - metabolism
KW - ovarian function
KW - small antral follicles
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U2 - 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2015.11.045
DO - 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2015.11.045
M3 - Article
C2 - 26718060
AN - SCOPUS:84953431672
SN - 0015-0282
VL - 105
SP - 1023
EP - 1034
JO - Fertility and Sterility
JF - Fertility and Sterility
IS - 4
ER -