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Publication : Sirt3 is dispensable for oocyte quality and female fertility in lean and obese mice.

First Author  Iljas JD Year  2020
Journal  FASEB J Volume  34
Issue  5 Pages  6641-6653
PubMed ID  32212196 Mgi Jnum  J:307376
Mgi Id  MGI:6707223 Doi  10.1096/fj.202000153R
Citation  Iljas JD, et al. (2020) Sirt3 is dispensable for oocyte quality and female fertility in lean and obese mice. FASEB J 34(5):6641-6653
abstractText  Mammalian oocytes rely heavily on mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) for generating ATP. However, mitochondria are also the primary source of damaging reactive oxygen species (ROS). Mitochondrial de-regulation, therefore, underpins poor oocyte quality associated with conditions such as obesity and aging. The mitochondrial sirtuin, Sirt3, is critical for mitochondrial respiration and redox regulation. Interestingly, however, Sirt3 knockout (Sirt3(-/-) ) mice do not exhibit systemic compromise under basal conditions, only doing so under stressed conditions such as high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity. Mouse oocytes depleted of Sirt3 exhibit increased ROS in vitro, but it is unknown whether Sirt3 is necessary for female fertility in vivo. Here, we test this for the first time by investigating ovarian follicular reserve, oocyte maturation (including detailed spindle assembly and chromosome segregation), and female fertility in Sirt3(-/-) females. We find that under basal conditions, young Sirt3(-/-) females exhibit no defects in any parameters. Surprisingly, all parameters also remain intact following HFD-induced obesity. Despite markedly increased ROS levels in HFD Sirt3(-/-) oocytes, ATP levels nevertheless remain normal. Our data support that ATP is sustained in vivo through increased mitochondrial mass possibly secondary to compensatory upregulation of another sirtuin, Sirt1, which has overlapping functions with Sirt3.
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