Kotzur Travis, Benavides-Garcia Roberto, Mecklenburg Jennifer, Sanchez Jamila R, Reilly Matthew, Hermann Brian P
Department of Biology, The University of Texas at San Antonio, One UTSA Circle, San Antonio, TX, 78249, USA.
Departments of Biomedical Engineering and Ophthalmology, The Ohio State University, 1080 Carmack Road, Columbus, OH, 43210, USA.
Reprod Biol Endocrinol. 2017 Jan 11;15(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s12958-016-0226-1.
The lifesaving chemotherapy and radiation treatments that allow patients to survive cancer can also result in a lifetime of side-effects, including male infertility. Infertility in male cancer survivors is thought to primarily result from killing of the spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) responsible for producing spermatozoa since SSCs turn over slowly and are thereby sensitive to antineoplastic therapies. We previously demonstrated that the cytokine granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) can preserve spermatogenesis after alkylating chemotherapy (busulfan).
Male mice were treated with G-CSF or controls before and/or after sterilizing busulfan treatment and evaluated immediately or 10-19 weeks later for effects on spermatogenesis.
We demonstrated that the protective effect of G-CSF on spermatogenesis was stable for at least 19 weeks after chemotherapy, nearly twice as long as previously shown. Further, G-CSF treatment enhanced spermatogenic measures 10 weeks after treatment in the absence of a cytotoxic insult, suggesting G-CSF acts as a mitogen in steady-state spermatogenesis. In agreement with this conclusion, G-CSF treatment for 3 days before busulfan treatment exacerbated the loss of spermatogenesis observed with G-CSF alone. Reciprocally, spermatogenic recovery was modestly enhanced in mice treated with G-CSF for 4 days after busulfan. These results suggested that G-CSF promoted spermatogonial proliferation, leading to enhanced spermatogenic regeneration from surviving SSCs. Similarly, there was a significant increase in proportion of PLZF+ undifferentiated spermatogonia that were Ki67+ (proliferating) 1 day after G-CSF treatment.
Together, these results clarify that G-CSF protects spermatogenesis after alkylating chemotherapy by stimulating proliferation of surviving spermatogonia, and indicate it may be useful as a retrospective fertility-restoring treatment.
能让癌症患者存活下来的挽救生命的化疗和放疗也可能导致一系列长期副作用,包括男性不育。男性癌症幸存者的不育被认为主要是由于负责产生精子的精原干细胞(SSCs)被杀死,因为精原干细胞更新缓慢,因此对抗肿瘤治疗敏感。我们之前证明,细胞因子粒细胞集落刺激因子(G-CSF)可以在烷化化疗(白消安)后保护精子发生。
雄性小鼠在进行绝育性白消安治疗之前和/或之后接受G-CSF或对照处理,并在处理后立即或10 - 19周后评估其对精子发生的影响。
我们证明,G-CSF对精子发生的保护作用在化疗后至少19周内是稳定的,几乎是之前所显示时间的两倍。此外,在没有细胞毒性损伤的情况下,G-CSF处理在10周后增强了精子发生指标,这表明G-CSF在稳态精子发生中起促有丝分裂原的作用。与这一结论一致的是,在白消安治疗前3天给予G-CSF处理会加剧单独使用G-CSF时观察到的精子发生损失。相反,在白消安处理后给予G-CSF处理4天的小鼠中,精子发生的恢复略有增强。这些结果表明,G-CSF促进精原细胞增殖,从而导致存活的精原干细胞增强精子发生再生。同样,在G-CSF处理1天后,PLZF +未分化精原细胞中Ki67 +(增殖)的比例显著增加。
总之,这些结果表明,G-CSF通过刺激存活精原细胞的增殖来保护烷化化疗后的精子发生,并表明它可能作为一种恢复生育能力的回顾性治疗方法有用。