Regular monitoring on experimental animal management found the fluctuation of ART outcome, which showed a necessity to explore whether superovulation treatment is responsible for such unexpected outcome. This study was subsequently conducted to examine whether superovulation treatment can preserve ultrastructural integrity and developmental competence of oocytes following oocyte activation and embryo culture. A randomized study using mouse model was designed and in vitro development (experiment 1), ultrastructural morphology (experiment 2) and functional integrity of the oocytes (experiment 3) retrieved after PMSG/hCG injection (superovulation group) or not (natural ovulation; control group) were evaluated. In experiment 1, more oocytes were retrieved following superovulation than following natural ovulation, but natural ovulation yielded higher (p < 0.0563) maturation rate than superovulation. The capacity of mature oocytes to form pronucleus and to develop into blastocysts in vitro was similar. In experiment 2, a notable (p < 0.0186) increase in mitochondrial deformity, characterized by the formation of vacuolated mitochondria, was detected in the superovulation group. Multivesicular body formation was also increased, whereas early endosome formation was significantly decreased. No obvious changes in other microorganelles, however, were detected, which included the formation and distribution of mitochondria, cortical granules, microvilli, and smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum. In experiment 3, significant decreases in mitochondrial activity, ATP production and dextran uptake were detected in the superovulation group. In conclusion, superovulation treatment may change both maturational status and functional and ultrastuctural integrity of oocytes. Superovulation effect on preimplantation development can be discussed.
Purpose:We performed a comparative analysis of the plasma levels of antithrombin (AT) III, plasminogen, fibrinogen, and D-dimer among patients with and without clinically localized prostate cancer to investigate the clinical significance of the coagulation profile in prostate cancer. Materials and Methods: A prospective study was performed in which plasma levels of AT III, plasminogen, fibrinogen, and D-dimer were assessed in patients before they underwent prostate biopsy. According to the results of the biopsy, the patients were categorized into the cancer group or the control group. Levels of the four coagulation factors were then compared between the cancer and control groups. Also, levels of the four coagulation factors were correlated with tumor stage and grade in the cancer group. Results: The cancer group had significantly lower levels of AT III activity and higher plasma D-dimer levels than did the control group (p=0.007 and p=0.018, respectively). Within the cancer group, no significant differences were observed in the levels of AT III, plasminogen, fibrinogen, or D-dimer between those with a pathological Gleason score of ≥7 and otherwise. Regarding pathologic stage of prostate cancer, the subjects with organ-confined disease and those with extraprostatic extension of a tumor demonstrated no significant differences in the preoperative levels of the four coagulation factors analyzed. Conclusions: Our results suggest that plasma levels of AT III and D-dimer are altered in patients with prostate cancer. Further study is needed to elucidate the underlying mechanism and clinical significances of such a phenomenon among patients with clinically localized prostate cancer.
This study examined
whether neonatal chicken bone marrow cells (cBMCs) could support the
osteogenesis of human stromal cells in a three-dimensional (3D) extracellular
bioprinting niche. The majority (>95%) of 4-day-old cBMCs subcultured
5 times were positive for osteochondrogenesis-related genes (Col I, Col II, Col X,
aggrecan, Sox9, osterix, Bmp2, osteocalcin, Runx2, and osteopontin) and their related proteins (Sox9,
collagen type I, and collagen type II). LC–MS/MS analysis demonstrated
that cBMC-conditioned medium (c-medium) contained proteins related
to bone regeneration, such as periostin and members of the TGF-β
family. Next, a significant increase in osteogenesis was detected
in three human adipose tissue-derived stromal cell (hASC) lines, after
exposure to c-medium concentrates in 2D culture (p < 0.05). To evaluate biological function in a 3D environment,
we employed the cBMC-derived bioactive components as a cell-supporting
biomaterial in collagen bioink, which was printed to construct a 3D
hASC-laden scaffold for observing osteogenesis. Complete osteogenesis
was detected in vitro. Moreover, after transplantation of the hASC-laden
structure into rats, prominent bone formation was observed compared
with that in control rats receiving scaffold-free hASC transplantation.
These results demonstrated that substance(s) secreted by chick bone
marrow cells clearly activated the osteogenesis of hASCs in 2D- or
3D-niches.
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