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Impact of the antioxidant quercetin on morphological integrity and follicular development in the in vitro culture of Bos indicus female ovarian fragments.

Marcela Bortoletto CerezettiSuellen Miguez GonzálezCamila Rodrigues FerrazWaldiceu Aparecido VerriEvelyn Andrade RabeloMarcelo Marcondes SenedaFábio Morotti
Published in: In vitro cellular & developmental biology. Animal (2021)
We evaluated the effect of quercetin on the in vitro culture of bovine ovarian fragments in relation to morphology, development, and oxidative stress. Ovaries (n = 12) from Nelore heifers (n = 6) were used. Each pair of ovaries was divided into nine fragments, and one fragment from each animal was fixed in Bouin solution for 24 h (histology control) or frozen (- 80°C; control for oxidative stress). Other ovarian fragments (n = 8) were distributed into concentrations of 0, 10, 25, and 50 μg/mL of quercetin added to the culture medium for 5 or 10 d. Data were analyzed by chi-square test or ANOVA followed by Tukey's test (P < 0.05). Treatment with 25 μg/mL quercetin resulted in the highest proportion of total intact follicles for 5 (67.3%) and 10 d (57.1%); the concentration of 25 μg/mL also presented the best proportion of developing follicles for 5 d (68.7%) and 10 d (62.8%). Treatment with 25 μg/mL quercetin resulted in significant ferric reduction for 10 d of culture, but not for 5 d. No difference (P > 0.1) was observed in the production of reactive oxygen species or in the oxidative degradation of lipids between treatments and non-cultivated controls. Treatment with 25 μg/mL quercetin preserved the morphological integrity of the developing follicles for 5 and 10 d of culture, in addition to promoting the best antioxidant potential after 10 d of culture in bovine ovarian fragments.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • reactive oxygen species
  • dna damage
  • anti inflammatory
  • combination therapy
  • risk assessment
  • deep learning
  • heat shock protein
  • smoking cessation