Paracrine effects of oocyte secreted factors and stem cell factor on porcine granulosa and theca cells in vitro.
Brankin. Victoria V; Mitchell. Marcus R P MR; Webb. Bob B; Hunter. Morag G MG
Key Findings
- Oocyte‑derived factors strongly increase granulosa cell proliferation and estradiol production while suppressing progesterone.
- The same oocyte signals raise theca cell numbers but lower their progesterone and androstenedione output.
- Stem cell factor (SCF) raises progesterone in granulosa cells dose‑dependently and lowers it in theca cells; high SCF also boosts estradiol in co‑cultures.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the data suggest IGF‑1 LR3 can affect ovarian cell growth and hormone balance in vitro, but there’s no clear guidance on dosing or benefits for human health. It highlights the complexity of local ovarian signaling, so any self‑experimentation with IGF‑1 LR3 for fertility or hormone modulation should be approached cautiously and backed by human studies.
Summary
This pig‑ovary cell study shows that IGF‑1 LR3, together with signals from the egg, can make ovarian support cells (granulosa and theca) grow more and change hormone output, while a peptide called stem cell factor (SCF) tweaks progesterone levels. The work is done in a dish, not in people, so it’s mostly a mechanistic glimpse rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol.
Abstract
Oocyte control of granulosa and theca cell function may be mediated by several growth factors via a local feedback loop(s) between these cell types. This study examined both the role of oocyte-secreted factors on granulosa and thecal cells, cultured independently and in co-culture, and the effect of stem cell factor (SCF); a granulosa cell derived peptide that appears to have multiple roles in follicle development. Granulosa and theca cells were isolated from 2-6 mm healthy follicles of mature porcine ovaries and cultured under serum-free conditions, supplemented with: 100 ng/ml LR3 IGF-1, 10 ng/ml insulin, 100 ng/ml testosterone, 0-10 ng/ml SCF, 1 ng/ml FSH (granulosa), 0.01 ng/ml LH (theca) or 1 ng/ml FSH and 0.01 ng/ml LH (co-culture) and with/without oocyte conditioned medium (OCM) or 5 oocytes. Cells were cultured in 96 well plates for 144 h, after which viable cell numbers were determined. Medium was replaced every 48 h and spent medium analysed for steroids. Oocyte secreted factors were shown to stimulate both granulosa cell proliferation (P < 0.001) and oestradiol production (P < 0.001) by granulosa cells throughout culture. In contrast, oocyte secreted factors suppressed granulosa cell progesterone production after both 48 and 144 hours (P < 0.001). Thecal cell numbers were increased by oocyte secreted factors (P = 0.02), together with a suppression in progesterone and androstenedione synthesis after 48 hours (P < 0.001) and after 144 hours (P = 0.02), respectively. Oocyte secreted factors also increased viable cell numbers (P < 0.001) in co-cultures together with suppression of progesterone (P < 0.001) and oestradiol (P < 0.001). In granulosa cell only cultures, SCF increased progesterone production in a dose dependent manner (P < 0.001), whereas progesterone synthesis by theca cells was reduced in a dose dependent manner (P = 0.002). Co-cultured cells demonstrated an increase in progesterone production with increasing SCF dose (P < 0.001) and an increase in oestradiol synthesis at the highest dose of SCF (100 ng/ml). In summary, these findings demonstrate the presence of a co-ordinated paracrine interaction between somatic cells and germ cells, whereby oocyte derived signals interact locally to mediate granulosa and theca cell function. SCF has a role in modulating this local interaction. In conclusion, the oocyte is an effective modulator of granulosa-theca interactions, one role being the inhibition of luteinization.
Study Information
pubmed
2003
2003-08-12T00:00:00.000Z
10.1186/1477-7827-1-55