To determine the relationship between serum total testosterone (TT) levels and oxidative stress indices in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), and to investigate the effect of oxidative stress on androgen synthesis and its mechanism in rat ovarian theca-interstitial (T-I) cells. Clinical, hormonal, metabolic, and oxidative stress parameters were analyzed in a cross-sectional case-control study including 626 patients with PCOS and 296 controls. The effects of oxidized low-density lipoprotein (ox-LDL) and oxidized high-density lipoprotein (ox-HDL) on cell proliferation, TT secretion, and expression of key enzymes involved in testosterone synthesis were evaluated in T-I cells. Serum TT levels were elevated with an increase in ox-LDL levels, whereas glutathione concentrations were lower in the high-TT subgroup than in the low-TT subgroup. The average ovarian volume and ox-LDL and malondialdehyde levels were significant predictors of TT levels in the multivariate regression models. In a rat ovarian T-I cell model, lipoprotein and oxidized lipoprotein treatments stimulated proliferation and promoted testosterone secretion. The mRNA and protein levels of 17α-hydroxylase were significantly higher in oxidized lipoprotein-treated cells than those in lipoprotein-treated cells. The mRNA levels of cholesterol side chain cleavage enzyme and steroidogenic acute regulatory protein were also significantly higher in ox-HDL-treated cells than in HDL-treated cells. Oxidative stress can promote androgen production by up-regulating the expression of testosterone synthesis-related enzymes in vitro and may be an essential factor in elevating serum TT levels in patients with PCOS.
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