Treatment with trypLE before freezing improves thawing integrity and functionality of sheep ovarian tissue
Resumen: Objective
To study innovative approaches to ovarian tissue cryopreservation, a critical issue for fertility preservation in pediatric cancer patients. Despite historical attempts, recent advances in cancer treatment have underscored the urgent need for more effective and reliable ovarian tissue cryopreservation methods. Our research aims to evaluate if decreasing the rigidity of stroma before cryopreservation by investigating pre-treatments with enzymes can enhance the quality of ovarian tissue post-thawing.

Design
Our research evaluated the use of five commonly used enzymes to disaggregate tissue (trypLE, collagenase, dispase, accutase and hyaluronidase) before freezing ovarian tissue to decrease rigidity and facilitate cryopreservation. Sheep ovaries, with high similarity to human ovaries, were used as an animal model. Tissue structure, cell proliferation, apoptosis and viability were assessed before and after thawing.

Results
Our findings showed that enzymatic treatment with trypLE before freezing offered immediate benefits post-thawing with the highest viability values and percentage of intact follicles. A decrease in viability was observed after thawing and culturing the samples. The pretreatment with accutase damaged the tissue severely with also the lowest viability values. Ki67-positive follicles and stromal cells were observed in fresh samples, but only trypLE and hyaluronidase maintained Ki67-positive antral follicles after 2 days culture. Besides, only trypLE maintained all follicles negative to caspase-3 after thawing, and 7 days after culture primordial follicles were apoptotic in all treatments apart from trypLE.

Conclusion
our findings suggest that trypLE pretreatment could provide a beneficial approach for maintaining the functions and viability of cryopreserved ovaries after thawing. Further research is needed to fully understand their impact and optimize cryopreservation protocols in this important clinical context.

Idioma: Inglés
DOI: 10.1186/s13048-025-01593-7
Año: 2025
Publicado en: Journal of ovarian research 18, 94 (2025), [12 pp.]
ISSN: 1757-2215

Tipo y forma: Article (Published version)
Área (Departamento): Area Histología (Dpto. Anatom.Histolog.Humanas)
Área (Departamento): Área Medicina y Cirugía Animal (Dpto. Patología Animal)

Exportado de SIDERAL (2025-10-17-14:23:20)


Visitas y descargas

Este artículo se encuentra en las siguientes colecciones:
articulos > articulos-por-area > medicina_y_cirugia_animal
articulos > articulos-por-area > histologia



 Notice créée le 2025-05-30, modifiée le 2025-10-17


Versión publicada:
 PDF
Évaluer ce document:

Rate this document:
1
2
3
 
(Pas encore évalué)