Abstract

Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) is a member of the TGF-β superfamily produced by follicular granulosa cells (GCs) in women from late gestation to the end of reproductive life. AMH is thought to inhibit aromatase (i.e., CYP19) expression and decrease the conversion of androgens to oestrogens, especially in small antral follicles before dominance is achieved. Thus, AMH acts as a gatekeeper of ovarian steroidogenesis. However, the exact function and processing of AMH has not been fully elucidated. The present study measured and determined AMH isoforms in human follicular fluid (FF) from small antral follicles and in human GCs using four ELISAs, western blot, and immunofluorescence analysis. We evaluated the presence of the following isoforms: full-length AMH precursor (proAMH), cleaved associated AMH (AMHN,C), N-terminal pro-region (AMHN), and active C-terminal (AMHC) AMH. A negative correlation between follicle diameter and the AMH forms was detected. Moreover, western blot analysis detected various AMH forms in both FFs and GCs, which did not match our consensus forms, suggesting an unknown proteolytic processing of AMH. The presence of these new molecular weight isoforms of AMH differs between individual follicles of identical size in the same woman. This study detected several AMH forms in FF and GCs obtained from human small antral follicles, which suggests that intrafollicular processing of AMH is complex and variable. Thus, it may be difficult to develop an antibody-based AMH assay that detects all AMH isoforms. Furthermore, the variability between follicles suggests that designing a recombinant AMH standard will be difficult.

Highlights

  • Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) is a member of the TGF-b superfamily produced by human ovarian granulosa cells (GCs) in women from late foetal life to the end of reproductive life

  • The present study demonstrates that the number of AMH isoforms in follicular fluid (FF) and GCs found in human small antral follicles are unexpectedly high, and highly variable between follicles and between FFs and corresponding GCs in a large set of samples

  • The distribution of AMH isoforms in GCs differs profoundly between follicles, even in follicles of the same size from the same woman

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Summary

Introduction

Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) is a member of the TGF-b superfamily produced by human ovarian granulosa cells (GCs) in women from late foetal life to the end of reproductive life. AMH may promote primary and secondary follicle growth in vitro either by enhancing recruitment and survival and/or by enhancing follicle growth; later in folliculogenesis, AMH seems to inhibit antral follicle formation and dominant follicle selection [9,10,11,12]. Another in vitro study found that AMH suppressed initiation of primordial follicle growth in human ovarian tissue [13]. The mechanisms and functions of AMH in follicular recruitment and development may differ between species and may exert species-specific effects

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