Single intraovarian dose of stem cell- and platelet-secreted factors mitigates age-related ovarian infertility in a murine model

Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2023 May;228(5):561.e1-561.e17. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2023.01.018. Epub 2023 Jan 24.

Abstract

Background: Systemic administration of soluble factors from bone marrow-derived stem cells combined with activated platelet-rich plasma (SC-PRP) restored ovarian function, mediated through paracrine signaling, in murine models of chemotherapy-induced ovarian damage and human tissue from poor responder patients. However, the effects against age-related infertility and the efficacy of local administration have not been evaluated yet.

Objective: This study aimed to assess whether a single intraovarian dose of stem cells combined with activated platelet-rich plasma can recover ovarian function, oocyte quality, and developmental competence in older mice.

Study design: The effects of stem cells combined with activated platelet-rich plasma against age-related infertility were assessed following controlled ovarian stimulation in an aging murine model reproducing 3 physiological stages of women's reproductive life, namely young, advanced maternal age, and menopausal (n=12 animals per group). Female mice were randomized to receive a single intraovarian injection (10 μL/ovary) of either saline, activated platelet-rich plasma, or stem cells combined with activated platelet-rich plasma. Seven days later, the mice were stimulated, naturally mated, and sacrificed to harvest their ovaries for histologic assessment and molecular analysis and their oviducts to evaluate oocyte maturation and to assess early embryo development.

Results: A single intraovarian injection of stem cells combined with activated platelet-rich plasma promoted follicle activation and development in young, advanced maternal age, and old mice. Furthermore, stem cells combined with activated platelet-rich plasma rescued fertility in older mice by enhancing the quantity and quality of ovulated mature oocytes and supporting early embryo development to the blastocyst stage in all the evaluated ages. These fertility outcomes were positively associated with mitochondrial quality, treatment-increased mitochondrial DNA copy numbers, and reduced oxidative damage and apoptosis. Finally, the effects observed by histologic analysis were supported at the proteomic level. Functional proteomic analyses revealed molecular mechanisms involved in oocyte maturation and quality, mitochondrial function, and recovery of the ovarian stroma.

Conclusion: Bone marrow-derived stem cells combined with activated platelet-rich plasma is a promising treatment with the potential to improve the reproductive outcomes of women with age-related infertility, exceeding the restorative effects of platelet-rich plasma alone. Although further research in human ovarian samples is still required, the autologous nature of stem cell factors collected by noninvasive mobilization, their combination with platelet-rich plasma, and the local administration route suggest that stem cells combined with activated platelet-rich plasma treatment could be a potentially effective and safe application for future clinical practice.

Keywords: age-related infertility; early embryo development; fertility rescue; intraovarian administration; mitochondrial function; oocyte; ovarian aging; platelet activation; platelet-rich plasma; stem cell secreted factors.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Disease Models, Animal
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Infertility*
  • Mice
  • Oocytes
  • Ovary*
  • Proteomics
  • Random Allocation
  • Stem Cells