4.4 Article

Hormone suppression with GnRH antagonist promotes spermatogenic recovery from transplanted spermatogonial stem cells in irradiated cynomolgus monkeys

Journal

ANDROLOGY
Volume 1, Issue 6, Pages 886-898

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.2047-2927.2013.00126.x

Keywords

gonadotropin-releasing hormone-antagonist; infertility; radiation; spermatogenesis; transplantation

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH/NICHD [HD 061301]
  2. Cancer Center Support Grant from the NIH [CA 16672]
  3. NIH [K99/R00 HD062687]
  4. Florence M. Thomas Professorship in Cancer Research

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Hormone suppression given before or after cytotoxic treatment stimulates the recovery of spermatogenesis from endogenous and transplanted spermatogonial stem cells (SSC) and restores fertility in rodents. To test whether the combination of hormone suppression and transplantation could enhance the recovery of spermatogenesis in primates, we irradiated (7Gy) the testes of 12 adult cynomolgus monkeys and treated six of them with gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonist (GnRH-ant) for 8weeks. At the end of this treatment, we transfected cryopreserved testicular cells with green fluorescent protein-lentivirus and autologously transplanted them back into one of the testes. The only significant effect of GnRH-ant treatment on endogenous spermatogenesis was an increase in the percentage of tubules containing differentiated germ cells (tubule differentiation index; TDI) in the sham-transplanted testes of GnRH-ant-treated monkeys compared with radiation-only monkeys at 24weeks after irradiation. Although transplantation alone after irradiation did not significantly increase the TDI, detection of lentiviral DNA in the spermatozoa of one radiation-only monkey indicated that some transplanted cells colonized the testis. However, the combination of transplantation and GnRH-ant clearly stimulated spermatogenic recovery as evidenced by several observations in the GnRH-ant-treated monkeys receiving transplantation: (i) significant increases (similar to 20%) in the volume and weight of the testes compared with the contralateral sham-transplanted testes and/or to the transplanted testes of the radiation-only monkeys; (ii) increases in TDI compared to the transplanted testes of radiation-only monkeys at 24weeks (9.6% vs. 2.9%; p=0.05) and 44weeks (16.5% vs. 6.1%, p=0.055); (iii) detection of lentiviral sequences in the spermatozoa or testes of five of the GnRH-ant-treated monkeys and (iv) significantly higher sperm counts than in the radiation-only monkeys. Thus hormone suppression enhances spermatogenic recovery from transplanted SSC in primates and may be a useful tool in conjunction with spermatogonial transplantation to restore fertility in men after cancer treatment.

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