Grandmaternal smoke exposure reduces female fertility in a murine model, with great-grandmaternal smoke exposure unlikely to have an effect
Abstract STUDY QUESTION What effect does multigenerational (F2) and transgenerational (F3) cigarette smoke exposure have on female fertility in mice? SUMMARY ANSWER Cigarette smoking has a multigenerational effect on female fertility. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY It has been well established that cigarette...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Human reproduction (Oxford) 2017-06, Vol.32 (6), p.1270-1281 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract
STUDY QUESTION
What effect does multigenerational (F2) and transgenerational (F3) cigarette smoke exposure have on female fertility in mice?
SUMMARY ANSWER
Cigarette smoking has a multigenerational effect on female fertility.
WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY
It has been well established that cigarette smoking decreases female fertility. Furthermore, a growing body of evidence suggests that smoking during pregnancy decreases the fertility of daughters and increases cancer and asthma incidence in grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION
Six-week-old C57BL/6 female mice were exposed nasally to cigarette smoke or room air (controls) for 5 weeks prior to being housed with males. Females continued to be exposed to smoke throughout pregnancy and lactation until pups were weaned. A subset of F1 female pups born to these smoke and non-smoke exposed females were bred to create the F2 grandmaternal exposed generation (multigenerational). Finally, a subset of F2 females were bred to create the F3 great-grandmaternal exposed generation (transgenerational). The reproductive health of F2 and F3 females was examined at 8 weeks and 9 months.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS
Ovarian and oocyte quality was examined in smoke exposed and control animals. A small-scale fertility trial was performed before ovarian changes were examined using ovarian histology and immunofluorescence and/or immunoblotting analysis of markers of apoptosis (TUNEL) and proliferation (proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH)). Oocyte quality was examined using immunocytochemistry to analyze the metaphase II spindle and ploidy status. Parthenogenetic activation of oocytes was used to investigate meiosis II timing and preimplantation embryo development. Finally, diestrus hormone serum levels (FSH and LH) were quantified.
MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE
F2 smoke exposed females had no detectable change in ovarian follicle quality at 8 weeks, although by 9 months ovarian somatic cell proliferation was reduced (P = 0.0197) compared with non-smoke exposed control. Further investigation revealed changes between control and smoke exposed F2 oocyte quality, including altered meiosis II timing at 8 weeks (P = 0.0337) and decreased spindle pole to pole length at 9 months (P = 0.0109). However, no change in preimplantation embryo development was observed following parthenogenetic activation. The most noticeable effect of cigarette smoke exposu |
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ISSN: | 0268-1161 1460-2350 |
DOI: | 10.1093/humrep/dex073 |