학술논문

#389 : Fertility Preservation During Chemotherapy Treatment by NAD+ Repletion in Mice
Document Type
article
Source
Fertility & Reproduction, Vol 05, Iss 04, Pp 518-518 (2023)
Subject
Reproduction
QH471-489
Language
English
ISSN
26613182
2661-3174
2661-3182
Abstract
Background and Aims: Chemotherapy induced ovarian failure and infertility is an important concern in female cancer patients of reproductive age or younger, and non-invasive, pharmacological approaches to prevent chemotherapy induced infertility are urgently needed. Here we investigate whether pharmacological elevation of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) ameliorates chemotherapy induced female infertility in mice. Method: 8-week-old C57BL6 female mice were treated +/- chemotherapy (doxorubicin, Dox; 10 mg/kg) and +/- nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN; 200 mg/kg i.p. once and 2 g/L in drinking water on-going), an orally bioavailable metabolic precursor to NAD+. Effects on fertility were measured by impact on ovarian reserve and folliculogenesis, ovulation rates and breeding performance. Effects on the ovarian NAD+ metabolome were assessed by mass spectrometry. A potential adverse effect of NMN on the efficiency of chemotherapy was assessed using a xenograft model of mammary cancer. Results: NMN treatment did not prevent a decline in the ovarian reserve caused by chemotherapy but did maintain the health of the remaining primordial follicle and total follicle populations, leading to a restoration in oocyte yield in chemo-treated mice (Dox vs Dox+NMN; P