Autophagy modulation alleviates cryoinjury in murine spermatogonial stem cell cryopreservation

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Title
Autophagy modulation alleviates cryoinjury in murine spermatogonial stem cell cryopreservation
Author(s)
S E Jung; J S Ahn; Y H Kim; H J Oh; B J Kim; Sun-Uk Kim; B Y Ryu
Bibliographic Citation
Andrology, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 340-353
Publication Year
2022
Abstract
Background: Cryopreservation can expand the usefulness of spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) in various fields. However, previous investigations that have attempted to modulate cryoinjury-induced mechanisms to increase cryoprotective efficiency have mainly focused on apoptosis and necrosis. Objectives: This study aimed to establish an effective molecular-based cryoprotectant for SSC cryopreservation via autophagy modulation. Materials and methods: To determine the efficacy of autophagy modulation, we assessed the recovery rate and relative proliferation rate and performed western blotting for the determination of autophagy flux, immunocytochemistry and real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) for SSC characterization, and spermatogonial transplantation for in vivo SSC functional activity. Results: The results showed that a basal level of autophagy caused a higher relative proliferation rate (pifithrin-μ 0.01 μM, 184.2 ± 11.2%; 3-methyladenine 0.01 μM, 175.3 ± 10.3%; pifithrin-μ 0.01 μM + 3-methyladenine 0.01 μM, P3, 224.6 ± 22.3%) than the DMSO control (100 ± 6.2%). All treatment groups exhibited normal characteristics, suggesting that these modulators could be used as effective cryoprotectants without changing the properties of the undifferentiated germ cells. According to the results of the in vivo spermatogonial transplantation assay, the colonies per total number of cultured SSCs was significantly higher in the pifithrin-μ 0.01 μM (1596.7 ± 172.5 colonies), 3-methyladenine 0.01 μM (1522.1 ± 179.2 colonies), and P3 (1727.5 ± 196.5 colonies) treatment groups than in the DMSO control (842.8 ± 110.08 colonies), which was comparable to that of the fresh control (1882.1 ± 132.1 colonies). Discussion: A basal level of autophagy is more essential for resilience in frozen SSCs after thawing, rather than the excessive activation or inhibition of autophagy. Conclusion: A basal level of autophagy plays a critical role in the pro-survival response of frozen SSCs after thawing; herein, a new approach by which SSC cryoprotective efficiency can be improved was identified.
Keyword
AutophagyCryopreservationp53Small moleculeSpermatogonial stem cell
ISSN
2047-2919
Publisher
Amer Soc Andrology
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/andr.13105
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Ochang Branch Institute > Division of National Bio-Infrastructure > Futuristic Animal Resource & Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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