Zeng Xiangzhou, Fan Xinyin, Yu Haitao, Cai Shuang, Zhou Liangrui, Wu Huanwen, Zhang Zhiwen, Quan Shuang, Li Siyu, Wang Xinyu, Xue Bangxin, Liu Lu, Qiao Shiyan, Zeng Xiangfang
State Key Laboratory of Animal Nutrition and Feeding, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs Feed Industry Centre, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, PR China; Beijing Bio-Feed Additives Key Laboratory, Beijing 100193, PR China.
Department of Pathology, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Science and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100193, PR China.
J Adv Res. 2025 Jul;73:73-91. doi: 10.1016/j.jare.2024.08.028. Epub 2024 Aug 22.
Metabolic syndrome is a serious public health concern across the globe. However, the typical metabolites and mechanisms underlying the decreased fertility related to metabolic syndrome is still elusive.
The aim of the present study was to explore the typical metabolites and mechanisms underlying the decreased fertility related with metabolic syndrome.
Utilizing metabolomics, a comparative analysis was conducted on fatty acid compositions in various tissues of sows with high and low reproductive performance. Additionally, serum fatty acid compositions in a metabolic syndrome model (obese mice) induced by a high-fat diet (HFD) were investigated to elucidate the lipid metabolites associated with metabolic syndrome. Furthermore, the impact of nervonic acid (NA) on ovarian function was examined using rodent animal models (rats and mice). Through biological techniques such as transcriptomics, CUT&Tag, and analysis of post-translational protein modifications, the molecular mechanisms underlying NA mediated ovarian inflammation were further elucidated based on models utilizing ovarian granulosa cells from pigs, humans, and mice. Finally, validation was performed on ovaries from patients diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome.
In vitro, targeted serum lipidomic analysis revealed that sows with low embryo survival rates exhibited abnormal lipid metabolism characterized by abnormal accumulation of NA in the liver, ovary, and adipose tissue. Additionally, elevated NA levels trigger ovarian inflammation to cause ovarian dysfunction in both sows and rats. Mechanistically, NA induce mitochondrial oxidative stress through inhibiting respiratory chain proteins CYTB and NDFUB8 to activate NLRP3 inflammasome, which triggers procaspase-1 into active caspase-1, and convert the cytokine precursors pro-IL-1β into biologically active IL-1β in ovarian granulosa cells. Notably, we evidenced that NA promotes IL-1β activities by increasing H3K9ac modification level of IL-1β promoter regions and regulating the expression of the transcription factor AP-1. Finally, we found that the decreased expression of CerS2 in ovaries and the increased level of chemokine CXCL14 may be the cause of abnormal NA accumulation. Surprisingly, individuals with polycystic ovary syndrome, obesity, non-alcoholic fatty liver or gestational diabetes mellitus exhibit a high level of serum NA.
Collectively, our current study suggests that NA is a typical metabolite of metabolic syndrome, which strongly influences the ovarian function and embryo survival and also provides that interfering with mitochondrial ROS production is a potential strong strategy for target solving abnormal NA accumulation.
代谢综合征是全球范围内严重的公共卫生问题。然而,与代谢综合征相关的生育力下降背后的典型代谢物和机制仍不清楚。
本研究旨在探索与代谢综合征相关的生育力下降背后的典型代谢物和机制。
利用代谢组学,对繁殖性能高和低的母猪各组织中的脂肪酸组成进行了比较分析。此外,研究了高脂饮食(HFD)诱导的代谢综合征模型(肥胖小鼠)中的血清脂肪酸组成,以阐明与代谢综合征相关的脂质代谢物。此外,使用啮齿动物模型(大鼠和小鼠)研究了神经酸(NA)对卵巢功能的影响。通过转录组学、CUT&Tag和翻译后蛋白质修饰分析等生物技术,基于使用猪、人类和小鼠卵巢颗粒细胞的模型,进一步阐明了NA介导卵巢炎症的分子机制。最后,对诊断为多囊卵巢综合征的患者的卵巢进行了验证。
在体外,靶向血清脂质组学分析显示,胚胎存活率低的母猪表现出脂质代谢异常,其特征是肝脏、卵巢和脂肪组织中NA异常积累。此外,NA水平升高会引发卵巢炎症,导致母猪和大鼠的卵巢功能障碍。从机制上讲,NA通过抑制呼吸链蛋白CYTB和NDFUB8诱导线粒体氧化应激,从而激活NLRP3炎性小体,触发前半胱天冬酶-1转化为活性半胱天冬酶-1,并将细胞因子前体pro-IL-1β转化为卵巢颗粒细胞中具有生物活性的IL-1β。值得注意的是,我们证明NA通过增加IL-1β启动子区域的H3K9ac修饰水平并调节转录因子AP-1的表达来促进IL-1β活性。最后,我们发现卵巢中CerS2表达降低和趋化因子CXCL14水平升高可能是NA异常积累的原因。令人惊讶的是,患有多囊卵巢综合征、肥胖、非酒精性脂肪肝或妊娠期糖尿病的个体血清NA水平较高。
总体而言,我们目前的研究表明,NA是代谢综合征的典型代谢物,它强烈影响卵巢功能和胚胎存活率,并且还表明干扰线粒体ROS产生是解决NA异常积累的潜在有力策略。