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Metabolic Signature of Energy Metabolism Alterations and Excess Nitric Oxide Production in Culture Media Correlate with Low Human Embryo Quality and Unsuccessful Pregnancy

Notwithstanding the great improvement of ART, the overall rate of successful pregnancies from implanted human embryos is definitely low. The current routine embryo quality assessment is performed only through morphological criteria, which has poor predictive capacity since only a minor percentage of...

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Autores principales: Pallisco, Romina, Lazzarino, Giacomo, Bilotta, Gabriele, Marroni, Francesca, Mangione, Renata, Saab, Miriam Wissam, Brundo, Maria Violetta, Pittalà, Alessandra, Caruso, Giuseppe, Capoccia, Elena, Lazzarino, Giuseppe, Tavazzi, Barbara, Bilotta, Pasquale, Amorini, Angela Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9821643/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36614333
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24010890
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author Pallisco, Romina
Lazzarino, Giacomo
Bilotta, Gabriele
Marroni, Francesca
Mangione, Renata
Saab, Miriam Wissam
Brundo, Maria Violetta
Pittalà, Alessandra
Caruso, Giuseppe
Capoccia, Elena
Lazzarino, Giuseppe
Tavazzi, Barbara
Bilotta, Pasquale
Amorini, Angela Maria
author_facet Pallisco, Romina
Lazzarino, Giacomo
Bilotta, Gabriele
Marroni, Francesca
Mangione, Renata
Saab, Miriam Wissam
Brundo, Maria Violetta
Pittalà, Alessandra
Caruso, Giuseppe
Capoccia, Elena
Lazzarino, Giuseppe
Tavazzi, Barbara
Bilotta, Pasquale
Amorini, Angela Maria
author_sort Pallisco, Romina
collection PubMed
description Notwithstanding the great improvement of ART, the overall rate of successful pregnancies from implanted human embryos is definitely low. The current routine embryo quality assessment is performed only through morphological criteria, which has poor predictive capacity since only a minor percentage of those in the highest class give rise to successful pregnancy. Previous studies highlighted the potentiality of the analysis of metabolites in human embryo culture media, useful for the selection of embryos for implantation. In the present study, we analyzed in blind 66 human embryo culture media at 5 days after in vitro fertilization with the aim of quantifying compounds released by cell metabolism that were not present as normal constituents of the human embryo growth media, including purines, pyrimidines, nitrite, and nitrate. Only some purines were detectable (hypoxanthine and uric acid) in the majority of samples, while nitrite and nitrate were always detectable. When matching biochemical results with morphological evaluation, it was found that low grade embryos (n = 12) had significantly higher levels of all the compounds of interest. Moreover, when matching biochemical results according to successful (n = 17) or unsuccessful (n = 25) pregnancy, it was found that human embryos from the latter group released higher concentrations of hypoxanthine, uric acid, nitrite, and nitrate in the culture media. Additionally, those embryos that developed into successful pregnancies were all associated with the birth of healthy newborns. These results, although carried out on a relatively low number of samples, indicate that the analysis of the aforementioned compounds in the culture media of human embryos is a potentially useful tool for the selection of embryos for implantation, possibly leading to an increase in the overall rate of ART.
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spelling pubmed-98216432023-01-07 Metabolic Signature of Energy Metabolism Alterations and Excess Nitric Oxide Production in Culture Media Correlate with Low Human Embryo Quality and Unsuccessful Pregnancy Pallisco, Romina Lazzarino, Giacomo Bilotta, Gabriele Marroni, Francesca Mangione, Renata Saab, Miriam Wissam Brundo, Maria Violetta Pittalà, Alessandra Caruso, Giuseppe Capoccia, Elena Lazzarino, Giuseppe Tavazzi, Barbara Bilotta, Pasquale Amorini, Angela Maria Int J Mol Sci Article Notwithstanding the great improvement of ART, the overall rate of successful pregnancies from implanted human embryos is definitely low. The current routine embryo quality assessment is performed only through morphological criteria, which has poor predictive capacity since only a minor percentage of those in the highest class give rise to successful pregnancy. Previous studies highlighted the potentiality of the analysis of metabolites in human embryo culture media, useful for the selection of embryos for implantation. In the present study, we analyzed in blind 66 human embryo culture media at 5 days after in vitro fertilization with the aim of quantifying compounds released by cell metabolism that were not present as normal constituents of the human embryo growth media, including purines, pyrimidines, nitrite, and nitrate. Only some purines were detectable (hypoxanthine and uric acid) in the majority of samples, while nitrite and nitrate were always detectable. When matching biochemical results with morphological evaluation, it was found that low grade embryos (n = 12) had significantly higher levels of all the compounds of interest. Moreover, when matching biochemical results according to successful (n = 17) or unsuccessful (n = 25) pregnancy, it was found that human embryos from the latter group released higher concentrations of hypoxanthine, uric acid, nitrite, and nitrate in the culture media. Additionally, those embryos that developed into successful pregnancies were all associated with the birth of healthy newborns. These results, although carried out on a relatively low number of samples, indicate that the analysis of the aforementioned compounds in the culture media of human embryos is a potentially useful tool for the selection of embryos for implantation, possibly leading to an increase in the overall rate of ART. MDPI 2023-01-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9821643/ /pubmed/36614333 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24010890 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Pallisco, Romina
Lazzarino, Giacomo
Bilotta, Gabriele
Marroni, Francesca
Mangione, Renata
Saab, Miriam Wissam
Brundo, Maria Violetta
Pittalà, Alessandra
Caruso, Giuseppe
Capoccia, Elena
Lazzarino, Giuseppe
Tavazzi, Barbara
Bilotta, Pasquale
Amorini, Angela Maria
Metabolic Signature of Energy Metabolism Alterations and Excess Nitric Oxide Production in Culture Media Correlate with Low Human Embryo Quality and Unsuccessful Pregnancy
title Metabolic Signature of Energy Metabolism Alterations and Excess Nitric Oxide Production in Culture Media Correlate with Low Human Embryo Quality and Unsuccessful Pregnancy
title_full Metabolic Signature of Energy Metabolism Alterations and Excess Nitric Oxide Production in Culture Media Correlate with Low Human Embryo Quality and Unsuccessful Pregnancy
title_fullStr Metabolic Signature of Energy Metabolism Alterations and Excess Nitric Oxide Production in Culture Media Correlate with Low Human Embryo Quality and Unsuccessful Pregnancy
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic Signature of Energy Metabolism Alterations and Excess Nitric Oxide Production in Culture Media Correlate with Low Human Embryo Quality and Unsuccessful Pregnancy
title_short Metabolic Signature of Energy Metabolism Alterations and Excess Nitric Oxide Production in Culture Media Correlate with Low Human Embryo Quality and Unsuccessful Pregnancy
title_sort metabolic signature of energy metabolism alterations and excess nitric oxide production in culture media correlate with low human embryo quality and unsuccessful pregnancy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9821643/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36614333
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms24010890
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