Acetate abates adipose-ovarian endocrinometabolic disturbance in experimentally induced polycystic ovarian syndrome
- PMID: 39706543
- DOI: 10.1016/j.steroids.2024.109554
Acetate abates adipose-ovarian endocrinometabolic disturbance in experimentally induced polycystic ovarian syndrome
Abstract
Background: Besides ovarian dysfunction and infertility, individuals with polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) also present a number of systemic disturbances including functional derangements in the adipose tissue which possibly aggravates the endocrinometabolic abnormality in PCOS. Epigenetic changes have been implicated in metabolic-related disorders including PCOS. However, its pathogenic involvement in adipose-ovarian dysfunction is unclear. Therefore, the present research was designed to investigate the impact of epigenetic regulator, particularly short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) on adipose-ovarian dysfunction in PCOS rat model.
Materials and methods: Eight-weeks-old female Wistar rats were allotted into four groups of n = 5, namely control, sodium acetate (SACT), letrozole (LETZ), and LETZ + SACT. Letrozole (1 mg/kg; p.o.) was administered daily for 21 days to induce PCOS. Thereafter, the animals were treated daily with SACT (200 mg/kg; p.o.) for 6 weeks.
Results: Letrozole-induced PCOS rats were presented with androgen excess, insulin resistance/hyperinsulinemia, ovarian cystic follicles, increased levels of anti-Mullerian hormone, leptin, with a corresponding decrease in 17-β estradiol, and adiponectin. In addition, the LETZ group also showed dyslipidemia, decreased levels of adipose/ovarian sirtuin-1, adipose triglyceride, increased lipase activity as well as ovarian triglyceride, with corresponding increase in adipose/ovarian lipid peroxidation, caspase-6, TGF-β1, inflammatory response (TNF-α, NF-κB and MIF) and decreased GSH. Adipose/ovarian mitofusin 2 depletion was observed in LETZ group and this was accompanied by elevated HDAC2. Nevertheless, administration of acetate reversed these perturbations.
Conclusion: Overall, the present results suggest that acetate ameliorates adipose-ovarian metabolic and endocrine disruptions that accompany PCOS, and these beneficial effects of acetate are associated with reduction of HDAC2 levels and elevation of mitofusin 2/sirtuin-1.
Keywords: Adipose; HDAC2; Inflammation; Mitochondrion; Ovary; PCOS.
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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