1. During infancy low levels of follicle-stimulating hormone may result in high rate of germ cell apoptosis.
- Author
-
Hildorf S, Cortes D, Thorup J, Clasen-Linde E, Hutson J, and Li R
- Subjects
- Apoptosis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Infant, Male, Sertoli Cells, Spermatogonia, Testis, Cryptorchidism, Follicle Stimulating Hormone
- Abstract
Purpose: It has been suggested that follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) plays a role in preventing germ cell apoptosis. We aimed to compare apoptotic rate of boys with cryptorchidism having different levels of FSH in order to investigate its role in apoptosis., Methods: Hormonal profiles and testicular biopsies from 30 boys with unilateral cryptorchidism (age range: 4-14 months) were included. Based on FSH level, the boys were grouped into three (3 × 10) having high (>97.5percentile), low (<2.5percentile), or within normal range. Sections underwent immunohistochemical staining to analyze the number of germ cells and type A dark spermatogonia per cross-sectional tubule. One section was co-stained with immunofluorescent antibodies against an apoptotic marker (cleaved caspase-3), proliferation marker (Ki67), Sertoli cell marker (anti-Müllerian hormone) and processed by confocal imaging for analysis. Germ cell apoptosis was calculated as the apoptosis index (percentage caspase-3+ germ cells/total germ cell number)., Results: Fifty percent (5/10) of the boys with low FSH had an apoptosis index above 90% compared with 15% (3/20) of the boys with normal or high FSH (p = 0.04). Caspase-3+ germ cells were most likely to be located on the basement membrane (p<0.05)., Conclusion: Our findings lead to trends proposing that FSH may play a role in preventing apoptosis., Type of Study: Prognosis Study LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: III., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors have no conflict of interest to disclose. The funding sponsors had no role in this study., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF