Effect of the reproductive cycle on morphology and activity of the ovarian surface epithelium in mammals
View/ Open
Date
2010Author
Saddick, Salina Yahya
Metadata
Abstract
The layer of cells lining the outer surface of the mammalian ovary, the
ovarian surface epithelium (OSE), is a constant feature throughout the dynamic
tissue remodeling that occurs throughout the reproductive cycle (follicle growth,
ovulation, corpora lutea formation and pregnancy). Abnormal development of these
cells is responsible for 90% of all epithelial ovarian cancers in women and
epidemiological studies have shown that susceptibility to ovarian cancer is
negatively correlated with increasing pregnancy. Little is known about how OSE
cells are affected at each stage of the cycle, so the main aim of this study was to
determine how the reproductive cycle affected proliferation and degeneration of OSE
cells. This study utilised three animal models each with a different type of
reproductive cycle: a mono-ovular seasonal breeder (Sheep), a mono-ovular
polyoestrous breeder (Cow) and a poly-ovular non human primate (marmoset) to
allow comparisons to be made. Comparison of OSE proliferative activity was made
in sheep and marmoset at each stage of the cycle including pregnancy and
anoestrous. The bovine model was used to investigate apoptotic cell death.
Proliferative activity of somatic cells within the sheep ovary was monitored
throughout the reproductive cycle by detection of cell cycle markers PCNA and Ki67
using immunohistochemistry. The pattern of OSE proliferation was correlated with
the pattern of follicle development at each stage (sheep and marmoset). During
pregnancy cell proliferation was significantly lower in OSE and in granulosa cells,
reflecting a suppression of mature follicle development during these stages whereas
in cycling animals proliferation was increased. Differences in OSE proliferation were
observed in relation to the local underlying tissue environment in both sheep and
marmoset. Epithelial cell rupture and regeneration enhanced the hormonal mitogenic
action on epithelial cells, which showed highest proliferation over corpora lutea in
each animal model.
To test the hypothesis that these changes are mediated by hormones or
growth factors ovine OSE cells were cultured and proliferative activity monitored
after treatment with several factors: fetal calf serum (FCS), follicular fluid from
follicles of varying sizes, corpora lutea extracts, recombinant human IGF-1, oestradiol and progesterone. IGF alone was demonstrated to have an affect on
increasing proliferation of cultured OSE cells. Levels of FSHr and LHr were
monitored by quantitative real- time PCR and it was demonstrated that the
concentration of gonadotrophin receptors in OSE, increased prior to and after
ovulation, at which time the in vivo OSE proliferation also peaked.
The in situ apoptosis index was determined in bovine tissue using TUNEL
throughout the regular cycle, and at mid and late-pregnancy stages. The results
showed that pregnancy induced apoptotic activity in OSE cells and up regulated the
tumour suppressor gene p53. Cultured bovine OSE cells also exhibited an increased
level of apoptosis following progesterone treatment. Since p53/p53 gene expression
in OSE over the corpora lutea producing progesterone also increased, this
progesterone-mediated apoptosis may be mediated through an up-regulation of p53
synthesis.
The effect of pregnancy and low production of gonadotrophins in the
regulation of OSE cell morphology and activity was further investigated in the
marmoset monkey (a non-human primate) treated with GnRH antagonist and infused
with BrdU to monitor proliferative activity. OSE proliferation was correlated to
ovarian events (follicular growth, ovulation and luteinization) and this was
suppressed during pregnancy. Inhibition of gonadotrophin secretion by treatment
with a GnRH antagonist also markedly inhibited OSE proliferation.
Taken together these studies support the hypothesis that pregnancy and
periods of anovulation reduce proliferation of OSE cells and alter the pattern of
apoptotic cell death and that this effect is independent of species and reproductive
pattern. Suppression of gonadotrophins and other growth factors during pregnancy
could enhance p53-mediated apoptosis of damaged and mitogenic cells arising from
repeated ovulations. This effect may partly explain why increasing number of
pregnancies in woman reduces the chance of epithelial ovarian cancers.