Capillary angiogenesis and degeneration in bovine ovarian antral follicles

Author:

Jiang JY,Macchiarelli G,Tsang BK,Sato E

Abstract

Angiogenesis and capillary degeneration are both evident during ovarian follicle growth. However, the characteristics and distribution of thecal capillary proliferative and degenerative structures have not been fully defined. Indeed, the role of thecal microvasculature changes in follicular atresia is still a matter of debate. The present study examined the distribution of thecal capillary changes occurring during follicular growth and related the changes to capillary morphology (by scanning electron microscopy, SEM, on bovine ovarian corrosion casts) with the incidence of capillary apoptosis (TdT-mediated dUTP nick end-labelling, TUNEL) and follicular status (as confirmed by follicular fluid steroid concentrations). SEM demonstrated well-perfused vascular plexuses of small to large antral follicles with structural and functional changes to capillaries. Angiogenesis was evident mainly in the apical part of the inner capillary layer of medium follicles and the middle or basal part of the inner capillary layer of dominant follicles that exhibited high oestradiol:progesterone ratios. Degenerative capillaries were observed mainly in the outer vascular layers of small follicles, and in the inner and outer vascular layers of medium antral follicles. Although apoptotic structures were present only in the outer capillaries of the theca interna of morphologically healthy antral follicles, atretic follicles showed apoptotic structures in both the outer and inner thecal capillary layers. These results show that angiogenesis increases during bovine follicular growth and occurs unevenly in different inner theca regions of the follicles. The differential angiogenic and degenerative response of theca interna capillaries may reflect differences in the microenvironment of the follicles, which in turn determine the fate of the follicles (continued growth versus atresia).

Publisher

Bioscientifica

Subject

Cell Biology,Obstetrics and Gynaecology,Endocrinology,Embryology,Reproductive Medicine

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