Elevated testicular apoptosis is associated with elevated sphingosine driven by gut microbiota in prediabetic sheep

BMC Biol. 2022 May 24;20(1):121. doi: 10.1186/s12915-022-01326-y.

Abstract

Background: Men with prediabetes often exhibit concomitant low-quality sperm production or even infertility, problems which urgently require improved therapeutic options. In this study, we have established a sheep model of diet-induced prediabetes that is associated with spermatogenic defects and have explored the possible underlying metabolic causes.

Results: We compared male sheep fed a normal diet with those in which prediabetes was induced by a rich diet and with a third group in which the rich diet was supplemented by melatonin. Only the rich diet group had symptoms of prediabetes, and in these sheep, we found impaired spermatogenesis characterized by a block in the development of round spermatids and an increased quantity of testicular apoptotic cells. Comparing the gut microbiomes and intestinal digest metabolomes of the three groups revealed a distinctive difference in the taxonomic composition of the microbiota in prediabetic sheep, and an altered metabolome, whose most significant feature was altered sphingosine metabolism; elevated sphingosine was also found in blood and testes. Administration of melatonin alleviated the symptoms of prediabetes, including those of impaired spermatogenesis, while restoring a more normal microbiota and metabolic levels of sphingosine. Fecal microbiota transplantation from prediabetic sheep induced elevated sphingosine levels and impaired spermatogenesis in recipient mice, indicating a causal role of gut microbiota in these phenotypes.

Conclusions: Our results point to a key role of sphingosine in the disruption of spermatogenesis in prediabetic sheep and suggest it could be a useful disease marker; furthermore, melatonin represents a potential prebiotic agent for the treatment of male infertility caused by prediabetes.

Keywords: 16S-rDNA; Fecal microbiota transplantation; Male infertility; Melatonin; Metabolome; Prediabetes; Sphingosine.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Apoptosis
  • Gastrointestinal Microbiome*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Melatonin*
  • Mice
  • Prediabetic State* / complications
  • Sheep
  • Sphingosine
  • Testis

Substances

  • Melatonin
  • Sphingosine