Sturgeon roe protein hydrolysate alleviates cyclophosphamide-induced ovarian dysfunction in mice with reduced ovarian oxidative-inflammatory injury, granulosa-cell apoptosis, and HPO-axis-related endocrine imbalance
Abstract
Chemotherapy-associated ovarian dysfunction is closely linked to oxidative–inflammatory injury of the follicular microenvironment, granulosa-cell loss, impaired steroidogenesis, and destabilized hypothalamic–pituitary–ovarian (HPO) axis feedback. This study evaluated sturgeon roe protein hydrolysate (SPH) as a nutraceutical candidate in a cyclophosphamide (CTX)-induced premature ovarian failure (POF) mouse model. Female C57BL/6 mice were exposed to CTX to establish a POF model and subsequently administered SPH by oral gavage. Ovarian index, estrous cyclicity, ovarian histopathology, granulosa-cell apoptosis (TUNEL), serum hormone profiles, ovarian oxidative stress and inflammatory markers, and gene-expression signatures in ovary and hypothalamus were assessed. CTX markedly reduced ovarian index, disrupted estrous cycling, increased granulosa-cell apoptosis, and induced a marked endocrine disturbance characterized by decreased AMH, cAMP, estradiol, and testosterone with compensatory elevations of GnRH, FSH, LH, and the FSH/LH ratio. CTX also increased lipid peroxidation and inflammatory cytokines while impairing antioxidant defense. SPH significantly increased the reduced ovarian index, partially improved estrous cyclicity and representative ovarian histological appearance, and suppressed granulosa-cell apoptosis, accompanied by a lower ovarian Bax/Bcl-2 mRNA ratio. SPH attenuated ovarian oxidative stress and inflammatory activation and partially corrected circulating hormone abnormalities and HPO-axis-related feedback indices. Notably, at the transcriptional level, SPH improved selected ovarian apoptosis-related gene-expression signatures, and hypothalamic Mapk1 showed a responsive recovery; however, broad hypothalamic transcriptional remodeling was not observed. Collectively, these results support that SPH improves CTX-induced ovarian dysfunction mainly in association with ovarian stress containment, apoptosis suppression, and endocrine rebalancing, while direct protein-level pathway mechanisms require further validation.
Please wait while we load your content...