Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
Effect of spermidine on ameliorating spermatogenic disorders in diabetic mice via regulating glycolysis pathway
Jinyuan Wang, Duo Ma, Min Luo, Yong-Peng Tan, Ou Zhong, Ge Tian, Yong-Ting Lv, Meixiang Li, Xi Chen, Zhi‐Han Tang, Linlin Hu, Xiaocan Lei
Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology · 2022 · ▲ 36 citations
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus (DM), a high incidence metabolic disease, is related to the impairment of male spermatogenic function. Spermidine (SPM), one of the biogenic amines, was identified from human seminal plasma and believed to have multiple pharmacological functions. However, there exists little evidence that reported SPM's effects on moderating diabetic male spermatogenic function. Thus, the objective of this study was to investigate the SPM's protective effects on testicular spermatogenic function in streptozotocin (STZ)-induced type 1 diabetic mice. Therefore, 40 mature male C57BL/6 J mice were divided into four main groups: the control group (n = 10), the diabetic group (n = 10), the 2.5 mg/kg SPM-treated diabetic group (n = 10) and the 5 mg/kg SPM-treated diabetic group (n = 10), which was given intraperitoneally for 8 weeks. The type 1 diabetic mice model was established by a single intraperitoneal injection of STZ 120 mg/kg. The results showed that, compare to the control group, the body and testis weight, as well the number of sperm were decreased, while the rate of sperm malformation was significantly increased in STZ-induced diabetic mice. Then the testicular morphology was observed, which showed that seminiferous tubule of testis were arranged in mess, the area and diameter of which was decreased, along with downregulated anti-apoptotic factor (Bcl-2) expression, and upregulated pro-apoptotic factor (Bax) expression in the testes. Furthermore, testicular genetic expression levels of Sertoli cells (SCs) markers (WT1, GATA4 and Vimentin) detected that the pathological changes aggravated observably, such as the severity of tubule degeneration increased. Compared to the saline-treated DM mice, SPM treatment markedly improved testicular function, with an increment in the body and testis weight as well as sperm count. Pro-apoptotic factor (Bax) was down-regulated expression with the up-regulated expression of Bcl-2 and suppression of apoptosis in the testes. What's more, expression of WT1, GATA4, Vimentin and the expressions of glycolytic rate-limiting enzyme genes (HK2, PKM2, LDHA) in diabetic testes were also upregulated by SPM supplement. The evidence derived from this study indicated that the SMP's positive effect on moderating spermatogenic disorder in T1DM mice's testis. This positive effect is delivered via promoting spermatogenic cell proliferation and participating in the glycolytic pathway's activation.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1186/s12958-022-00890-w
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-16 MST
Cite this
APA
Wang, J., Ma, D., Luo, M., Tan, Y., Zhong, O., Tian, G., Lv, Y., Li, M., Chen, X., Tang, Z., Hu, L., & Lei, X. (2022). Effect of spermidine on ameliorating spermatogenic disorders in diabetic mice via regulating glycolysis pathway. <em>Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12958-022-00890-w
Vancouver
Wang J, Ma D, Luo M, Tan Y, Zhong O, Tian G, et al. Effect of spermidine on ameliorating spermatogenic disorders in diabetic mice via regulating glycolysis pathway. Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology. 2022. doi:10.1186/s12958-022-00890-w.
BibTeX
@article{jinyuan2022Effect,
title = {Effect of spermidine on ameliorating spermatogenic disorders in diabetic mice via regulating glycolysis pathway},
author = {Jinyuan Wang and Duo Ma and Min Luo and Yong-Peng Tan and Ou Zhong and Ge Tian and Yong-Ting Lv and Meixiang Li and Xi Chen and Zhi‐Han Tang and Linlin Hu and Xiaocan Lei},
journal = {Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.1186/s12958-022-00890-w},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Nutrition Reviews 2024
Open access · CC-BY
The Clinical Impact of Time-restricted Eating on Cancer: A Systematic Review
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology 2021
Open access · CC-BY
Quality Matters? The Involvement of Mitochondrial Quality Control in Cardiovascular Disease
Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome 2023
Open access · CC-BY
Effects of time-restricted eating with different eating windows on human metabolic health: pooled analysis of existing cohorts
Nature Communications 2024
Open access · CC-BY
Inhibition of mitochondrial folate metabolism drives differentiation through mTORC1 mediated purine sensing
International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2022
Open access · CC-BY
NAD+ Precursors Repair Mitochondrial Function in Diabetes and Prevent Experimental Diabetic Neuropathy
Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine 2021
Open access · CC-BY