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Proteomic Alterations in Follicular Fluid of Human Small Antral Follicles Collected from Polycystic Ovaries-A Pilot Study.

Indira Pla ParadaAniel SanchezSusanne Elisabeth PorsStine Gry KristensenRoger AppelqvistK Barbara SahlinGyörgy Marko-VargaClaus Yding AndersenJohan Malm
Published in: Life (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Polycystic ovaries (PCO) contain antral follicles that arrest growing around 3-11 mm in diameter, perturbing the dominant follicle's selection and the subsequent ovulatory process. Proteomic alterations of PCO follicular fluid (FF) (i.e., microenvironment in which the oocyte develops until ovulation) have been studied from large follicles in connection with oocyte pickup during ovarian stimulation. The present study aimed to detect proteomic alterations in FF from unstimulated human small antral follicles (hSAF) obtained from PCO. After performing deep-sequencing label-free proteomics on 10 PCO and 10 non-PCO FF samples from unstimulated hSAF (4.6-9.8 mm), 1436 proteins were identified, of which 115 were dysregulated in PCO FF samples. Pathways and processes related to the immune system, inflammation, and oxidative stress appeared to be upregulated in PCO, while extracellular matrix receptors interactions, the collagens-containing extracellular matrix, and the regulation of signaling were downregulated. The secreted proteins SFRP1, THBS4, and C1QC significantly decreased their expression in PCO FF, and this downregulation was suggested to affect future oocyte competence. In conclusion, our study revealed, for the first time, evidence of proteomic alterations occurring in the FF of PCO hSAF that may be related to the dysfunction of follicular growth and subsequent oocyte competence.
Keyphrases
  • label free
  • extracellular matrix
  • oxidative stress
  • endothelial cells
  • stem cells
  • poor prognosis
  • signaling pathway
  • metabolic syndrome
  • insulin resistance
  • optic nerve
  • pluripotent stem cells