Follistatin is essential for normal postnatal development and function of mouse oviduct and uterus.
Holdsworth-Carson. S J SJ; Craythorn. R G RG; Winnall. W R WR; Dhaliwal. K K; Genovese. R R; Nowell. C J CJ; Rogers. P A W PA; de Kretser. D M DM; Hedger. M P MP; Girling. J E JE
Key Findings
- Mice lacking endogenous follistatin but expressing only human FST‑315 develop oviduct and uterine abnormalities by adulthood, despite normal appearance at birth.
- The abnormalities include failed oviduct coiling, disorganized myometrium, reduced endometrial glands, and increased leukocyte infiltration.
- Hormone exposure (estradiol) exacerbates uterine inflammation, and ovariectomy reveals altered uterine cell proliferation in FST‑315 mice.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers considering follistatin supplementation, especially women, this study warns that excess FST‑315 may impair reproductive organ function and increase inflammation. It suggests caution with broad‑spectrum follistatin products and highlights the need to monitor hormonal and reproductive health if using such peptides.
Summary
In female mice that only produce the FST‑315 version of the protein, the reproductive organs develop normally at birth but become abnormal in adulthood, showing poor tube coiling, disorganized muscle layers, fewer glands, and lots of immune cells. Hormone treatments made the inflammation worse. This suggests that having too much FST‑315 (or missing the FST‑288 form) can mess with female reproductive health.
Abstract
Female mice lacking the follistatin gene but expressing a human follistatin-315 transgene (tghFST315) have reproductive abnormalities (reduced follicles, no corpora lutea and ovarian-uterine inflammation). We hypothesised that the absence of follistatin-288 causes the abnormal reproductive tract via both developmental abnormalities and abnormal ovarian activity. We characterised the morphology of oviducts and uteri in wild type (WT), tghFST315 and follistatin-knockout mice expressing human follistatin-288 (tghFST288). The oviducts and uteri were examined in postnatal Day-0 and adult mice (WT and tghFST315 only) using histology and immunohistochemistry. Adult WT and tghFST315 mice were ovariectomised and treated with vehicle, oestradiol-17β (100ng injection, dissection 24h later) or progesterone (1mg×three daily injections, dissection 24h later). No differences were observed in the oviducts or uteri at birth, but abnormalities developed by adulthood. Oviducts of tghFST315 mice failed to coil, the myometrium was disorganised, endometrial gland number was reduced and oviducts and uteri contained abundant leukocytes. After ovariectomy, tghFST315 mice had altered uterine cell proliferation, and inflammation was maintained and exacerbated by oestrogen. These studies show that follistatin is crucial to postnatal oviductal-uterine development and function. Further studies differentiating the role of ovarian versus oviductal-uterine follistatin in reproductive tract function at different developmental stages are warranted.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
10.1071/rd13372