Abstract

Initiation of growth of resting ovarian follicles is a key phenomenon for providing an adequate number of mature oocytes in each ovulation, while preventing premature exhaustion of primordial follicle reserve during the reproductive lifespan. Resting follicle dynamics strongly suggest that primordial follicles are under constant inhibitory influences, by mechanisms and factors whose nature remains ill defined. In this work, we aimed to assess the influence of spatial determinants, with special attention to clustering patterns and crowding, on the fate of early follicles in the adult mouse and human ovary. To this end, detailed histological and morphometric analyses, targeting resting and early growing follicles, were conducted in ovaries from mice, either wild type (WT) or genetically modified to lack kisspeptin receptor expression (Kiss1r KO), and healthy adult women. Kiss1r KO mice were studied as model of persistent hypogonadotropism and anovulation. Different qualitative and quantitative indices of the patterns of spatial distribution of resting and early growing follicles in the mouse and human ovary, including the Morisita’s index of clustering, were obtained. Our results show that resting primordial follicles display a clear-cut clustered pattern of spatial distribution in adult mouse and human ovaries, and that resting follicle aggrupation is inversely correlated with the proportion of follicles initiating growth and entering into the growing pool. As a whole, our data suggest that resting follicle crowding, defined by changes in density and clustered pattern of distribution, is a major determinant of follicular activation and the fate of ovarian reserve. Uneven follicle crowding would constitute the structural counterpart of the major humoral regulators of early follicular growth, with potential implications in ovarian ageing and pathophysiology.

Highlights

  • The primordial follicles constitute the basic units of the mammalian ovary

  • Our study was focused on the adult ovarian reserve, postnatal day (PND)-21 wild type (WT) and Kiss1r KO mice, as well as 1 mo-old WT mice, were included in our histological analyses in order to obtain baseline data for comparative analyses of changes in the number, density and spatial pattern distribution of resting follicles in both genotypes

  • The numbers of early growing/primary (Fig 1F) and secondary (Fig 1G) follicles decreased with age, but variations were not so rapid, and no significant changes in the total numbers of primary and secondary follicles were found from 3- to 5-months of age in WT mice

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The primordial follicles constitute the basic units of the mammalian ovary. Growing follicles are recruited from the pool of resting primordial follicles, to provide mature eggs for cyclic ovulation. The first wave of growing follicles activates simulta-neously and gives rise to a nearly synchronous cohort of growing follicles that reach advanced secondary stage by postnatal day 15 (PND-15), and early antral stage at PND-21. This primordial follicle population is responsible for the first ovulation at puberty and is prevalent during the first two months of age, being progressively replaced by growing follicles derived from the post-pubertal primordial follicle population, from 2–3 months of age onwards [9]. Adjustment of the ovarian reserve appears to occur mainly by primordial follicle attrition [10,11], resulting in adequate numbers of resting primordial follicles at puberty [12]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.