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ID 117712
Author
Aoki, Hidenori Tokushima University
Tamura, Kou Tokushima University
Takeda, Asuka Tokushima University
Masaki, Rie Tokushima University
Yanagihara, Rie Tokushima University
Hayashi, Noriko Tokushima University
Yano, Yuya Tokushima University
Imaizumi, Junki Tokushima University
Keywords
activity
DHT
metabolic
PCOS
reproduction
Content Type
Journal Article
Description
Background: Although animal models of PCOS have been used in many studies, none of them can reproduce both the reproductive and metabolic phenotypes of PCOS. In addition, behavioral parameters have not been evaluated in PCOS animal models.
Purpose: We tried to produce an improved rat model of PCOS, and the reproductive, metabolic, and behavioral phenotypes of the model rats were evaluated.
Methods: Female rats were implanted with silicon tubes containing oil-dissolved dihydrotestosterone (Oil-DHT) as a new PCOS model. Their phenotypes were compared with those of conventional PCOS model rats (DHT), into which tubes containing crystalline DHT were implanted, and non-DHT-treated rats (control).
Results: Both the Oil-DHT and DHT rats showed greater body weight gain, food intake, and fat depot weight than the control rats. Furthermore, these groups showed fewer estrous stages and increased numbers of cystic follicles. The DHT rats exhibited lower ovarian and uterine weights than the control rats, whereas no such changes were observed in the Oil-DHT rats. The Oil-DHT and DHT rats showed less locomotor activity in the light phase than the control rats.
Conclusions: Our proposed PCOS model reproduced both the reproductive and metabolic phenotypes of PCOS and may have potential for PCOS research.
Journal Title
Reproductive Medicine and Biology
ISSN
14470578
NCID
AA11706516
Publisher
Japan Society for Reproductive Medicine|John Wiley & Sons
Volume
21
Issue
1
Start Page
e12416
Published Date
2021-10-02
Rights
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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DOI (Published Version)
URL ( Publisher's Version )
FullText File
language
eng
TextVersion
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departments
University Hospital
Medical Sciences