Puberty suppression followed by testosterone therapy does not impair reproductive potential in female mice.
Prachi GodiwalaTracy F UliaszKatie M LowtherDeborah KabackLisa M MehlmannPublished in: Endocrinology (2023)
More adolescents are coming out as transgender each year and are put on puberty blockers to suppress natal puberty, which is then followed by cross-hormone treatment to achieve puberty of the desired gender. Studies to examine the effects of puberty suppression and virilizing therapy on future reproductive potential among transgender males are lacking. This study used a translational murine IVF model to examine the effects of female puberty suppression with depot leuprolide acetate (LA), followed by virilizing therapy with testosterone cypionate (T), on embryologic and pregnancy outcomes. LA effectively inhibited puberty when mice were treated beginning at 3 weeks of age. LA treatment was associated with higher mouse weight but lower ovarian weight. LA-treated mice ovulated developmentally competent eggs in response to gonadotropin administration, albeit at a higher dose than controls. Ovaries from mice treated with LA and T produced oocytes that had morphologically normal meiotic spindles after in vitro maturation, and responded to gonadotropin stimulation. Eggs from mice treated with LA and T were fertilizable and produced developmentally competent embryos that led to births of fertile pups. These results suggest that fertility may not be impaired after puberty suppression and cross-hormone therapy for transgender males.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet induced
- pregnancy outcomes
- physical activity
- replacement therapy
- body mass index
- young adults
- weight loss
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- stem cells
- wild type
- skeletal muscle
- risk assessment
- hepatitis c virus
- newly diagnosed
- climate change
- human health
- cell therapy
- gestational age
- angiotensin ii
- smoking cessation