Epitalon-activated telomerase enhance bovine oocyte maturation rate and post-thawed embryo development.
Ullah. Safeer S; Haider. Zaheer Z; Perera. Chalani Dilshani CD; Lee. Su Hyeon SH; Idrees. Muhammad M; Park. Song S; Kong. Il-Keun IK
Key Findings
- Epitalon increased telomerase levels in bovine oocyte-cumulus complexes
- Higher telomerase activity led to a higher oocyte maturation rate
- Epitalon‑treated embryos showed better blastocyst hatching, implantation potential, and lower oxidative stress
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the data suggest Epitalon could be a telomerase‑activating agent that may improve reproductive cell health, but the evidence is limited to cows and lab conditions. Any self‑experimentation in humans would be speculative and should be approached with caution, as dosing, safety, and real‑world effectiveness are not established.
Summary
The study showed that adding the peptide Epitalon to cow egg cells in the lab boosted the activity of telomerase, which helped more eggs mature and led to better-quality embryos after freezing. While the results are promising for improving egg health, they were done in animals and in a very controlled lab setting, so it’s not clear how it would work in humans or everyday use.
Abstract
Telomerase is highly expressed in oocyte cumulus cells and plays a significant role in follicular development and oocyte maturation. In this study, we hypothesized that in vitro culture conditions may affect telomerase activity during in vitro embryo production (IVP) and that its activation may improve embryo quality. We first examined telomerase protein levels and localization in bovine cumulus-oocyte complexes via immunofluorescence assays. The results showed that healthy cumulus-oocyte complexes have the nuclear localization of the telomerase while the degraded cumulus-oocyte complex had reduced telomerase levels and that telomerase was localized in the cytoplasm. We activated telomerase via Epitalon, a tetrapeptide with the amino acid sequence Ala-Glut-Asp-Gly. We observed a significant improvement in the oocyte maturation rate compared with the control group (p < 0.05). Furthermore, telomerase activity was significantly compromised in post-thawed embryos, and Epitalon treatment significantly improved blastocyst hatching rate and implantation potential (p < 0.05). Moreover, we performed qPCR, reactive oxygen species, and JC-1 (ΔΨm) assays to evaluate the effect of Epitalon on the health of in vitro mature oocytes, cumulus cells, and post-thawed blastocysts, and the result showed that Epitalon highly enhances the quality and health of the oocyte, cumulus cell, and post-thawed blastocyst. Our results suggest that telomerase activation via Epitalon improves bovine in vitro embryo production.
Study Information
pubmed
2025
2025-01-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.lfs.2025.123381
2
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