4.7 Article

The number of oogonia and somatic cells in the human female embryo and fetus in relation to whether or not exposed to maternal cigarette smoking

Journal

HUMAN REPRODUCTION
Volume 24, Issue 10, Pages 2558-2566

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/humrep/dep226

Keywords

oogonia; human embryo and fetus; first-trimester pregnancy; cigarette smoking; PAH

Funding

  1. Vera and Carl Johan Michaelsen Foundation
  2. Danish Medical Research Council [22-03-0200]

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Prenatal exposure to maternal cigarette smoking or compounds of cigarette smoke is associated with serious reproductive hazards such as apoptotic death of oogonia in murine offspring and decreased fecundability in human offspring. The present study addresses potential effects of in utero exposure to cigarette smoking. Twenty-nine human first-trimester ovaries from legal abortions [aged 38-64 days post-conception (p.c.)] were collected. Mothers filled out a questionnaire about their smoking habits and delivered a urine sample for cotinine analysis. The ovarian cell numbers were estimated using stereological methods. A non-linear correlation between the numbers of oogonia and somatic cells in relation to age of the embryo/fetus was shown in 28 ovaries, including the first estimates performed in ovaries younger than 47 days p.c. Prenatal exposure to smoke showed a significant decrease in the number of somatic cells (P < 0.01). The number of oogonia was not significantly associated with prenatal exposure to maternal smoking (P < 0.09). The ratio between the two cell types decreased considerably from 1:45 to 1:23 from 38 to 46 days p.c. and was not affected by smoking. Oogonia proliferate and/or invade the developing ovary at a much faster relative rate than somatic cells. In utero exposure to maternal smoking significantly reduces the number of somatic cells from Days 38 to 64 p.c. Since oocytes cannot survive without being enclosed by somatic cells in a follicle, reduction in the somatic cells number may have long-range consequences on the number of oocytes available in adult life and on the future fertility of female offspring exposed to smoking in utero.

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