Hong-Jie Yuan
Shandong Agricultural University
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Featured researches published by Hong-Jie Yuan.
Biology of Reproduction | 2013
Bo Liang; De-Li Wei; Ya-Nan Cheng; Hong-Jie Yuan; Juan Lin; Xiang-Zhong Cui; Ming-Jiu Luo; Jing-He Tan
ABSTRACT This study examined the role of CRH-induced ovarian cell apoptosis in the restraint stress (RS)-induced impairment of oocyte competence. Oocyte percentages of apoptotic cumulus cells (CCs) did not differ between stressed and control mice before in vitro maturation (IVM) but became significantly higher in stressed mice after IVM without serum, growth factor, and hormone. The level of Bcl2 mRNA decreased significantly in mural granulosa cells (MGCs) and ovarian homogenates after RS. Whereas ovarian estradiol, testosterone, and IGF1 decreased, cortisol and progesterone increased significantly following RS. RS increased the level of CRH in serum, ovary, and oocyte while enhancing the expression of CRHR1 in CCs, MGCs, and thecal cells. RS down-regulated ovarian expression of glucocorticoid receptor and brain-derived neurotrophic factor. Furthermore, CRH supplementation to IVM medium impaired oocyte developmental potential while increasing apoptotic CCs, an effect that was completely overcome by addition of the CRHR1 antagonist antalarmin. Results suggest that RS impaired oocyte competence by increasing CRH but not glucocorticoids. Increased CRH initiated a latent apoptotic program in CCs and oocytes during their intraovarian development, which was executed later during IVM to impair oocyte competence. Thus, elevated CRH interacted with increased CRHR1 on thecal cells and MGCs, reducing the production of testosterone, estrogen, and IGF1 while increasing the level of progesterone. The imbalance between estrogen and progesterone and the decreased availability of growth factors triggered apoptosis of MGCs and facilitated CC expression of CRHR1, which interacted with the oocyte-derived CRH later during IVM to induce CC apoptosis and reduce oocyte competence.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Li-Hua Zhao; Xiang-Zhong Cui; Hong-Jie Yuan; Bo Liang; Liang-Liang Zheng; Yu-Xiang Liu; Ming-Jiu Luo; Jing-He Tan
It is known that psychological stress affects reproduction in women, but it is unknown whether the effect is by impairing implantation. Although studies suggest that long periods of auditory or restraint stress may inhibit implantation in rats and mice, the exact stage of pregnancy at which stress impairs implantation is unclear. Furthermore, whether stress impairs implantation by decreasing the heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF), estrogen and/or progesterone and whether by acting on embryos or on the uterus need further investigations. In this study, a 24-h restraint stress was initiated at 15:30 of day 3 (regimen 1) or at 07:30 (regimen 2) or 15:30 of day 4 (regimen 3) of pregnancy (vaginal plug = day 1) to observe effects of restraint stress applied at different peri-implantation stages on implantation. Among the three regimens, whereas regimens 1 and 3 affected neither term pregnancy nor litter size, regimen 2 reduced both. Further observations indicated that regimen 2 of restraint stress also delayed blastocyst hatching and the attachment reaction, decreased serum concentrations of progesterone and estradiol, and down regulated the expression of HB-EGF in both the endometrium and blastocysts. Taken together, the results suggested that restraint stress inhibited mouse implantation in a temporal window-dependent manner and by impairing blastocyst activation and hatching and uterine receptivity via down-regulating HB-EGF, estrogen and progesterone. Thus, the stress applied within the implantation window impaired implantation by acting on both embryos and the uterus.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Hong-Jie Yuan; Xiao Han; Nan He; Guo-Liang Wang; Shuai Gong; Juan Lin; Min Gao; Jing-He Tan
Previous studies indicate that stress damages oocytes with increased secretion of glucorticoids. However, although injection of female mice with cortisol decreased oocyte competence, exposure of mouse oocytes directly to physiological or stress-induced concentrations of glucorticoids did not affect oocyte maturation and embryo development. This study has explored the mechanisms by which glucocorticoids impair oocyte competence. Female mice were injected with cortisol and the effects of cortisol-injection on oocyte competence, ovarian cell apoptosis and Fas/FasL activation were observed. The results showed that cortisol-injection decreased (a) oocyte developmental potential, (b) the E2/P4 ratio in serum and ovaries, and (c) expression of insulin-like growth factor 1, brain-derived neurotrophic factor and glucocorticoid receptor in mural granulosa cells (MGCs), while increasing levels of (a) cortisol in serum and ovaries, (b) apoptosis in MGCs and cumulus cells (CCs), (c) FasL secretion in ovaries and during oocyte maturation in vitro, and (d) Fas in MGCs, CCs and oocytes. The detrimental effects of cortisol-injection on oocyte competence and apoptosis of MGCs and CCs were significantly relieved when the gld (generalized lymphoproliferative disorder) mice harboring FasL mutations were observed. Together, the results suggested that glucocorticoids impair oocyte competence by triggering apoptosis of ovarian cells via activating the Fas system.
Biology of Reproduction | 2015
Xiu-Fen Wu; Hong-Jie Yuan; Hong Li; Shuai Gong; Juan Lin; Yi-Long Miao; Tian-Yang Wang; Jing-He Tan
ABSTRACT The mechanisms by which restraint stress impairs oocyte developmental potential are unclear. Factors causing differences between the developmental potential of oocytes with surrounded nucleolus (SN) and that of oocytes with nonsurrounded nucleolus (NSN) are not fully characterized. Furthermore, the relationship between increased histone acetylation and methylation and the increased developmental competence in SN oocytes is particularly worth exploring using a system where the SN configuration can be uncoupled (dissociated) from increased histone modifications. In this study, female mice were subjected to restraint for 24 or 48 h or for 23 days before being examined for oocyte chromatin configuration, histone modification, and development in vitro and in vivo. Results showed that restraint for 48 h or 23 days impaired NSN-to-SN transition, histone acetylation and methylation in SN oocytes, and oocyte developmental potential. However, whereas the percentage of stressed SN oocytes returned to normal after a 48-h postrestraint recovery, neither histone acetylation/methylation in SN oocytes nor developmental competence recovered following postrestraint recovery with equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG) injection. Priming unstressed mice with eCG expedited oocyte histone modification to an early completion. Contrary to the levels of acetylated and methylated histones, the level of phosphorylated H3S10 increased significantly in the stressed SN oocytes. Together, the results suggest that 1) restraint stress impaired oocyte potential with disturbed histone modifications; 2) SN configuration was uncoupled from increased histone acetylation/methylation in the restraint-stressed oocytes; and 3) the developmental potential of SN oocytes is more closely correlated with epigenetic histone modification than with chromatin configuration.
Reproductive Sciences | 2016
Yan Gao; Fei Chen; Qiao-Qiao Kong; Shu-Fen Ning; Hong-Jie Yuan; Hua-Yu Lian; Ming-Jiu Luo; Jing-He Tan
Aim: Although previous studies found that 1-time acute stress applied during follicle maturation impaired oocyte competence, it is unknown whether repeated chronic stress, which is known to cause animal behavioral adaptation, would damage oocytes when applied during follicle growth. Methods and Results: In this study, female mice were exposed to repeated restraint stress (RRS) or unpredictable stress (UPS) for different days before equine chorionic gonadotropin injection to initiate oocyte prematuration development and to observe effects of different stressors on oocytes in the growing follicles. The results showed that although oocyte pre- and postimplantation development was unaffected when mice were exposed to RRS or UPS once a day for 4 days, development was impaired when mice were exposed to RRS for 8 or more days or to UPS twice a day for 4 days (4 × 2). The 4 × 2 UPS caused more oxidative stress in oocytes and severer apoptosis in antral follicles than did the 4-day RRS. The RRS mice were stressed consistently from days 1 to 23 of restraint, and the stress that a mouse had 4 × 2 UPS was severer than that from 4-day RRS. Conclusion: The results suggest that (1) the degree that a stress damages oocytes is the product of duration × severity of the stress; (2) RRS impaired oocyte developmental potential through cumulative effects on growing follicles; and (3) preantral follicles were not as sensitive to stress as antral follicles were.
Biology of Reproduction | 2017
Shuai Gong; Guang-Yi Sun; Min Zhang; Hong-Jie Yuan; Shuai Zhu; Guang-Zhong Jiao; Ming-Jiu Luo; Jing-He Tan
Abstract Although in vitro exposure to physiological concentrations of glucorticoids did not affect maturation of mouse oocytes, it significantly inhibited nuclear maturation of pig oocytes. Studies on this species difference in oocyte sensitivity to glucocorticoids will contribute to our understanding of how stress/glucocorticoids affect oocytes. We showed that glucorticoid receptors (NR3C1) were expressed in both oocytes and cumulus cells (CCs) of both pigs and mice; however, while cortisol inhibition of oocyte maturation was overcome by NR3C1 inhibitor RU486 in pigs, it could not be relieved by RU486 in mice. The mRNA level of 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1 (HSD11B1) was significantly higher than that of HSD11B2 in pig cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs), whereas HSD11B2 was exclusively expressed in mouse COCs. Pig and mouse cumulus-denuded oocytes (DOs) expressed HSD11B2 predominantly and exclusively, respectively. In the presence of cortisol, although inhibiting HSD11B2 decreased maturation rates of COCs in both species, inhibiting HSD11B1 improved maturation of pig COCs while having no effect on mouse COCs. Cortisolcortisone interconversion observation confirmed high HSD11B1 activities in pig oocytes but none in mouse oocytes, a higher HSD11B2 activity in mouse than in pig oocytes, and a rapid cortisolcortisone interconversion in pig COCs catalyzed by HSD11B1 from CCs and HSD11B2 from DOs. In conclusion, the species difference in glucocorticoid sensitivity between pig and mouse oocytes is caused by their different contents/ratios of HSD11B1 and HSD11B2, which maintain different concentrations of active glucocorticoids. While cortisol inhibited pig oocytes by interacting with NR3C1, glucocorticoid suppression of mouse oocytes was apparently not mediated by NR3C1. Summary Sentence The species difference in glucocorticoid sensitivity between pig and mouse oocytes is caused by their different contents/ratios of HSD11B1 and 2, and glucocorticoids impair maturation of mouse oocytes apparently not mediated by NR3C1.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Nan He; Qiao-Qiao Kong; Jun-Zuo Wang; Shu-Fen Ning; Yi-Long Miao; Hong-Jie Yuan; Shuai Gong; Xiang-Zhong Cui; Chuan-Yong Li; Jing-He Tan
While effects of gestational, neonatal or adolescent stress on psychological alterations in progeny have been extensively studied, much less is known regarding the effects of adult pre-gestational life events on offspring behavior. Although full siblings often display behavioral differences, whether the different parental life events prior to different pregnancies contribute to these behavioral differences among siblings is worth studying. In this study, male and female adult mice were restrained for 60 days before mating with unstressed or stressed partners. F1 offspring were examined for anxiety or mated to generate F2. Both F1 females and males from restrained mothers and/or fathers showed significantly reduced anxiety and serum cortisol and increased mRNA levels of glucocorticoid receptor and brain-derived neurotrophic factor compared to control offspring from unstressed parents. Similar behavioral and molecular changes were also observed in F2 females and males. Although restraint of adolescent mice reduced anxiety in F1 of both sexes, social instability of them increased anxiety predominantly in F1 females. Thus, adult pre-gestational restraint reduced offspring’s anxiety across generations; different stressors on parents may cause different phenotypes in offspring; individual behaviors can depend on adult life experiences of parents.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Min Zhang; Chuan-Xin Zhang; Liu-Zhu Pan; Shuai Gong; Wei Cui; Hong-Jie Yuan; Wei-Ling Zhang; Jing-He Tan
The developmental capacity of in vitro matured oocytes is inferior to that of the in vivo matured ones due to insufficient cytoplasmic maturation. Although great efforts were made to accomplish better cytoplasmic maturation by meiotic arrest maintenance (MAM) before in vitro maturation (IVM), limited progress has been achieved in various species. This study showed that MAM of porcine oocytes was better achieved with roscovitine than with dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (db-cAMP) or 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine. Oocyte developmental competence after IVM was significantly improved following MAM in 199 + FF medium (TCM-199 containing 10% porcine follicular fluid and 25 µM roscovitine) to a level even higher than that in control oocytes matured without pre-MAM. Observations on other markers further confirmed the positive effects of MAM in 199 + FF on oocyte cytoplasmic maturation. During MAM culture in 199 + FF, re-decondensation (RDC) of condensed chromatin occurred, and transcription of genes beneficial to cytoplasmic maturation was evident in some of the oocytes with surrounded nucleoli (SN). However, MAM with db-cAMP neither induced RDC nor improved oocyte developmental potential. Together, the results suggest that MAM in the presence of FF and roscovitine improved the developmental competence of porcine oocytes by promoting a pre-GVBD chromatin de-condensation and expression of beneficial genes.
Human Reproduction | 2017
Xiu-Wen Tan; Chang-Li Ji; Liang-Liang Zheng; Jie Zhang; Hong-Jie Yuan; Shuai Gong; Jiang Zhu; Jing-He Tan
STUDY QUESTION What are the mechanisms by which corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) and corticosterone impair the development of preimplantation embryos in the oviduct. SUMMARY ANSWER CRH and corticosterone do not affect preimplantation embryos directly, but impair their development indirectly by triggering apoptosis of oviductal epithelial cells (OECs) through activation of the Fas system. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY Studies report that stress impairs embryo development with facilitated secretion of CRH and glucocorticoids. Although an in vivo study demonstrated that preimplantation stress impaired embryo development in conjunction with oviductal apoptosis and activation of the Fas system, whether CRH or glucocorticoids damage embryos directly or indirectly by way of oviductal cells remains to be clarified. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION Mice of Kunming strain, the generalized lymphoproliferative disorder (gld) mice with a germline mutation F273L in Fas ligand in a C57BL/6J genomic background and the wild-type C57BL/6J mice were used. Female mice were used 8-10 weeks after birth. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS While some female mice were killed 48 h after being injected with equine CG to collect oviducts and prepare OECs, others were killed to recover zygotes after mating with males following superovulation with eCG and hCG. The zygotes obtained were cultured with or without CRH or corticosterone (CRH/Cort) either in Chatot-Ziomek-Bavister (CZB) medium with or without OECs or in conditioned medium (CM) conditioned with OECs pretreated or not with CRH/Cort. Preimplantation development, levels of redox potential and apoptosis, and expression of CRH receptor 1 (CRHR1), glucocorticoid receptor (GR), Fas and 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (HSD) were observed in embryos recovered at different times of in vitro culture. After culture of OECs with or without CRH/Cort, levels of redox potential and apoptosis, mRNA and protein expression of growth factors, and protein expression of CRHR1, GR and Fas were examined in OECs and the level of FasL was measured in CM. The gld mice were used to confirm a role for the Fas system in triggering apoptosis of embryos and oviducts. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE This study showed that blastocyst development was unaffected when mouse zygotes were cultured in CZB medium containing various concentrations of CRH/Cort but was impaired when embryos were cultured with CRH/Cort plus OECs or in CM conditioned with OECs pretreated with CRH/Cort (treatment CM). Culture in treatment-CM induced oxidative stress and apoptosis in embryos. Preimplantation embryos expressed GR and Fas at all stages and CRHR1 at the blastocyst stage only. Mouse 4-cell embryos and blastocysts expressed HSD2 but not HSD1. Culture of OECs with CRH/Cort increased their oxidative stress, apoptosis, CRHR1, Fas and FasL while decreasing their GR and growth factors. Blastocyst development in treatment-CM conditioned with OECs from gld mice harboring FasL mutations was superior to treatment-CM conditioned with wild-type mouse OECs. The results suggest that CRH/Cort impairs embryo development indirectly by inducing oviductal apoptosis via activating the Fas system. The insensitivity of preimplantation embryos to CRH and corticosterone is due to, respectively, a lack of CRHR and the exclusive expression of HSD2 that inactivate corticosterone. LARGE SCALE DATA Not applicable. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION Although significant, the conclusions were drawn from limited results obtained using mice and thus they need further verification in other species. For example, bovine embryos express both HSD1 and HSD2 at all the preimplantation stages whereas mouse preimplantation embryos express HSD2 exclusively without HSD1. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS The data are important for our understanding of the mechanisms by which stress affects female reproduction in both human and animals, as early stages of pregnancy are considered more vulnerable to stress than the late stages. STUDY FUNDING AND COMPETING INTEREST(S) This study was supported by grants from the National Basic Research Program of China (Nos. 2014CB138503 and 2012CB944403), the China National Natural Science Foundation (Nos. 31272444 and 30972096) and the Animal breeding improvement program of Shandong Province. All authors declare that their participation in the study did not involve factual or potential conflicts of interests.
Biology of Reproduction | 2017
Xiao Han; Rui Xue; Hong-Jie Yuan; Tian-Yang Wang; Juan Lin; Jie Zhang; Bo Liang; Jing-He Tan
Abstract It is known that oocytes and cumulus cells (CCs) are more resistant to apoptosis than other compartments of the antral follicle. However, although oocyte-secreted factors (OSFs) have been found to be involved in suppressing bovine CC apoptosis, little is known about the intracellular mechanisms by which OSFs render CCs resistant to apoptosis. Here, we show that coculture with mouse or pig cumulus-denuded oocytes, culture with recombinant mouse growth differentiation factor-9 (GDF-9), or culture in pig oocyte-conditioned medium (POCM) significantly inhibited CC apoptosis of mouse oocytectomized cumulus oophorus complexes (OOXs). The POCM contained both GDF-9 and bone morphogenetic protein-15, and their levels remained constant during culture of OOXs. The level of microRNA-21 (miR-21) was significantly lower in OOXs than in COCs after culture in a simplified α-MEM medium, but increased significantly when OOXs were cultured with GDF-9 or in POCM. The level of miR-21 in OSF-treated CCs was correlated with that of Dicer1 but not that of Drosha mRNA. Inhibiting activin receptor-like kinase 5 or SMAD3 completely abolished the beneficial effects of GDF-9 or POCM on CC apoptosis and miR-21 levels. Up- and downregulating miR-21 expression significantly reduced and increased CC apoptosis, respectively. The OSF-upregulated miR-21 expression suppressed CC apoptosis with activation of the PI3K/Akt signaling. In conclusion, miR-21 plays a pivotal role in the OSF suppression of CC apoptosis. OSFs upregulated miR-21 expression through the TGF-β superfamily signaling, which worked through DICER. MicroRNA-21 prevented apoptosis via the PI3K/Akt signaling. Summary Sentence MicroRNA-21 plays a pivotal role in the oocyte-secreted factor suppression of cumulus cell apoptosis to explore the intracellular mechanisms by which oocyte-secreted factors suppress cumulus cell apoptosis.