Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology (Jun 2021)

Luteolin Orchestrates Porcine Oocyte Meiotic Progression by Maintaining Organelle Dynamics Under Oxidative Stress

  • Soo-Hyun Park,
  • Soo-Hyun Park,
  • Pil-Soo Jeong,
  • Ye Eun Joo,
  • Ye Eun Joo,
  • Hyo-Gu Kang,
  • Hyo-Gu Kang,
  • Min Ju Kim,
  • Min Ju Kim,
  • Sanghoon Lee,
  • Bong-Seok Song,
  • Sun-Uk Kim,
  • Sun-Uk Kim,
  • Seong-Keun Cho,
  • Bo-Woong Sim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2021.689826
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Increasing evidence has demonstrated that oxidative stress impairs oocyte maturation, but the underlying mechanisms remain largely unknown. Here, for the first time, we examined the antioxidant role of luteolin in meiotic progression and the underlying mechanisms. Supplementation of 5 μM luteolin increased the rates of first polar body extrusion and blastocyst formation after parthenogenetic activation, and the expression levels of oocyte competence (BMP15 and GDF9)-, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MOS)-, and maturation promoting factor (CDK1 and Cyclin B)-related genes were also improved. Luteolin supplementation decreased intracellular reactive oxygen species levels and increased the expression levels of oxidative stress-related genes (SOD1, SOD2, and CAT). Interestingly, luteolin alleviated defects in cell organelles, including actin filaments, the spindle, mitochondria, the endoplasmic reticulum, and cortical granules, caused by H2O2 exposure. Moreover, luteolin significantly improved the developmental competence of in vitro-fertilized embryos in terms of the cleavage rate, blastocyst formation rate, cell number, cellular survival rate, and gene expression and markedly restored the competencies decreased by H2O2 treatment. These findings revealed that luteolin supplementation during in vitro maturation improves porcine meiotic progression and subsequent embryonic development by protecting various organelle dynamics against oxidative stress, potentially increasing our understanding of the underlying mechanisms governing the relationship between oxidative stress and the meiotic events required for successful oocyte maturation.

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