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Procyanidin B2 improves developmental capacity of bovine oocytes via promoting PPARγ/UCP1‐mediated uncoupling lipid catabolism during in vitro maturation.

Authors :
Luo, Yuwen
Li, Jun
Zheng, Lv
Reyimjan, Yizaitiguli
Ma, Yan
Huang, Shuaixiang
Liu, Hongyu
Zhou, Guizhen
Bai, Jiachen
Zhu, Yixiao
Sun, Yidan
Zou, Xinhua
Hou, Yunpeng
Fu, Xiangwei
Source :
Cell Proliferation. Jun2024, p1. 17p. 8 Illustrations, 3 Charts.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Metabolic balance is essential for oocyte maturation and acquisition of developmental capacity. Suboptimal conditions of in vitro cultures would lead to lipid accumulation and finally result in disrupted oocyte metabolism. However, the effect and mechanism underlying lipid catabolism in oocyte development remain elusive currently. In the present study, we observed enhanced developmental capacity in Procyanidin B2 (PCB2) treated oocytes during in vitro maturation. Meanwhile, reduced oxidative stress and declined apoptosis were found in oocytes after PCB2 treatment. Further studies confirmed that oocytes treated with PCB2 preferred to lipids catabolism, leading to a notable decrease in lipid accumulation. Subsequent analyses revealed that mitochondrial uncoupling was involved in lipid catabolism, and suppression of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) would abrogate the elevated lipid consumption mediated by PCB2. Notably, we identified peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) as a potential target of PCB2 by docking analysis. Subsequent mechanistic studies revealed that PCB2 improved oocyte development capacity and attenuated oxidative stress by activating PPARγ mediated mitochondrial uncoupling. Our findings identify that PCB2 intricately improves oocyte development capacity through targeted activation of the PPARγ/UCP1 pathway, fostering uncoupling lipid catabolism while concurrently mitigating oxidative stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09607722
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cell Proliferation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177793294
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cpr.13687