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Rats undernourished in utero have altered Ca 2+ signaling and reduced fertility in adulthood
Author(s) -
MuziFilho Humberto,
Souza Alessandro M.,
Bezerra Camila G. P.,
Boldrini Leonardo C.,
Takiya Christina M.,
Oliveira Felipe L.,
Nesi Renata T.,
Valença Samuel S.,
Silva Ananssa M. S.,
ZapataSudo Gisele,
Sudo Roberto T.,
EinickerLamas Marcelo,
Vieyra Adalberto,
Lara Lucienne S.,
Cunha Valeria M. N.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.14814/phy2.12587
Subject(s) - vas deferens , offspring , endocrinology , medicine , in utero , biology , endoplasmic reticulum , microbiology and biotechnology , pregnancy , fetus , genetics
Abstract Epidemiological and animal studies have shown that placental undernutrition impairs reproduction in adult offspring, but the underlying molecular mechanisms within the male genital tract remain unknown. Due to its special physiological characteristics in transport and the modulation of the environment to which its luminal content is exposed, we hypothesized that the vas deferens would be a highly sensitive target. The goals were to investigate whether intrauterine malnutrition affects molecular mechanisms related to Ca 2+ ‐ and oxidative stress‐modulated processes and causes structural alterations in the adult rat vas deferens that could attenuate fecundity and fertility. Male adult rats malnourished in utero had increased vas deferens weight associated with thickening of the muscular coat, a decrease in the total and haploid germ cells, a marked increase in the immature cells, and a decline in the numbers of pregnant females and total offspring per male rat. The ex vivo response of vas deferens from malnourished rats demonstrated an accentuated decrease in the contractile response to phenylephrine. The vas deferens had a marked decrease in Ca 2+ transport due to the uncoupling of Ca 2+ ‐stimulated ATP hydrolysis and ATP ‐driven Ca 2+ flux, and the downregulation of both sarco‐endoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ ‐ATPase 2 and the coupling factor 12‐kDa FK506‐binding protein. An increase in protein carbonylation (a marker of oxidative damage) and an imbalance between protein kinases C and A were observed as a legacy of undernutrition in early life. These results provide the structural and molecular basis to explain at least in part how maternal undernutrition affects fecundity and fertility in adult male rats.

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