In vitro development of mechanically and enzymatically isolated cat ovarian follicles

Author:

Nagashima Jennifer B1,Hill Andrea M1,Songsasen Nucharin1

Affiliation:

1. 1Center for Species Survival, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, National Zoological Park, Front Royal, Virginia, USA

Abstract

Graphical Abstract Isolation of ovarian follicles is a key step in culture systems for large mammalian species to promote the continued growth of follicles beyond the preantral stage in fertility preservation efforts. Still, mechanical isolation methods are user-skill dependent and time-consuming, whereas enzymatic strategies carry increased risk of damaging theca cell layers and the basement membranes. Here, we sought to determine an optimal method to rescue domestic cat (Felis catus) early antral and antral stage follicles from ovarian tissue and to evaluate the influence of isolation strategy on follicle development, survival, and gene expression during 14 days of in vitro culture in alginate hydrogel. Mechanical isolation was compared with 90 min digestion in 0.7 and 1.4 Wünsch units/mL Liberase blendzyme (0.7L and 1.4L, respectively). Mechanical isolation resulted in improved follicle growth and survival, and better antral cavity and theca cell maintenance in vitro, compared with 1.4L (P < 0.05) but displayed higher levels of apoptosis after incubation compared with enzymatically isolated follicles. However, differences in follicle growth and survival were not apparent until 7+ days in vitro. Expressions of CYP19A1, GDF9, LHR, or VEGFA were similar among isolation-strategies. Cultured follicles from all isolation methods displayed reduced STAR expression compared with freshly isolated follicles obtained mechanically or via 0.7L, suggesting that prolonged culture resulted in loss of theca cell presence and/or function. In sum, early antral and antral stage follicle development in vitro is significantly influenced by isolation strategy but not necessarily observable in the absence of extended culture. These results indicate that additional care must be taken in follicle isolation optimizations for genome rescue and fertility preservation efforts. Lay summary The ovary contains hundreds of eggs with only a select few developing from an immature stage through to ovulation over the course of an animal's lifetime. Rescue of eggs from this pool, and the ability to grow them in culture to a mature stage, would be incredibly valuable for fertility preservation efforts in both humans and endangered species. Currently, the isolation of ovarian follicles (eggs with their surrounding helper cells) is a key step in culture systems for large mammalian species, to promote continued growth. Yet, isolation methods may affect the follicle’s future developmental capacity. We evaluated two isolation strategies, mechanical micro-dissection (needle/scalpel blade) and enzymatic digestion (using Liberase blendzyme) on ovaries of domestic cats obtained via routine spay procedures. Mechanically isolated follicles displayed improved growth, survival, and indications of developmental competence in 14-day culture, compared with high concentration (1.4 Wünsch units/mL) enzyme-isolated follicles. However, mechanical isolation was not different from low (0.7 Wünsch units/mL) enzyme for these metrics, or for expression of key genes indicative of follicular cell functions. Further, differences in follicle growth/survival were not apparent until 7+ days in culture. Thus, ovarian follicle isolation strategies influence developmental potential in culture, and extended culture will be required to identify optimal methods for fertility preservation efforts.

Publisher

Bioscientifica

Subject

General Medicine

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