4.4 Article

Mitochondrial content, activity, and morphology in prepubertal and adult human ovaries

Journal

JOURNAL OF ASSISTED REPRODUCTION AND GENETICS
Volume 38, Issue 10, Pages 2581-2590

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10815-021-02282-2

Keywords

Prepubertal ovarian tissue; Mitochondria; Follicle isolation; Transmission electron microscopy

Funding

  1. Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique de Belgique (FNRS) [T.0077.14, 7.4590.16, 30443682, 5/4/150/5]
  2. Foundation Against Cancer [2018-042]

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The study found differences in mitochondrial content, activity, and morphology between prepubertal and adult ovarian follicles. Prepubertal follicles showed higher mitochondrial content and activity, as well as morphological differences. This suggests that important changes in mitochondria may occur during puberty.
Purpose To investigate whether mitochondrial content, activity, and morphology differ in prepubertal versus adult ovarian follicles. Methods Ovarian tissue was collected from 7 prepubertal girls (age 1-10 years) and 6 adult women (age 20-35 years). Primordial and primary follicles were isolated from frozen-thawed prepubertal and adult ovarian tissue and their viability was assessed. Mitochondrial content was investigated by TOMM20 immunostaining of prepubertal and adult ovarian tissue, while mitochondrial activity in isolated follicles was analyzed by MitoTracker CM-H2XRos and JC-1. Frozen-thawed ovarian tissue from the same patients was also evaluated by transmission electron microscopy to examine mitochondrial morphology. Results Higher TOMM20 staining was detected in prepubertal follicles compared to their adult counterparts, indicating the presence of more mitochondria in prepubertal follicles. Analysis of mitochondrial activity by MitoTracker showed higher fluorescence intensity in prepubertal follicles, suggesting that follicles in this group are more active than adult follicles. JC-1 analysis did not reveal any statistically significant difference in the inactive/active ratio between the two groups. Moreover, ultrastructural analysis by TEM detected morphological differences in the shape and cristae of prepubertal mitochondria, probably suggesting a mechanism of response to autophagy. Conclusion Differences in the number, activity, and morphology of mitochondria were reported, suggesting that consequential modifications might occur during puberty, which could be the window of opportunity required by mitochondria to undergo changes needed to reach maturity, and hence the capacity for ovulation and fertilization.

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