Reproductive Pathology What is new?

171
Reproductive Pathology What is new? Rob Foster Department of Pathobiology [email protected] www.uoguelph.ca/~rfoster

Transcript of Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Page 1: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Reproductive PathologyWhat is new?

Rob FosterDepartment of Pathobiology

[email protected]/~rfoster

Page 2: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Sponsors

• Australian Animal Pathology Standards Program

Australian Society for Veterinary Pathology Subcommittee on Animal Health Laboratory

Standards Animal Health Australia

• CL Davis Foundation

Page 3: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

The Circle of Life*

Conception

AttachmentBirth

Fetal development

Oestrus Cycle

Abortion, Maceration, Mummification

Stillbirth

Early embryonic mortality

Diseases of Sexual

Development

Genital pathology

‘From the day we arrive on the planet And blinking, step into the sunThere's more to be seen than

can ever be seen More to do than can ever be done’ *

* “Circle of Life” Music by Elton John, lyrics by Tim Rice, Performed by Elton John

Perinatal mortality

Page 4: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Day 1 – Production animals

Bovine

Ovine

Caprine

Porcine

Page 5: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Failure of Pregnancy

The trilogy

MotherFoetusPlacenta

InfectiousNon infectiousUnknown

Page 6: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Pragmatic approach

Page 7: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Practical approach

Page 8: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Results of investigation of fetus and placenta (sporadic)

Species No Dx (%) Infection

Cattle 58 42

Sheep 55 40

Goats 52 40

Pigs 72 28

Page 9: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Why the low rate

Selection of cases to submit

Sporadic

Outbreaks

Samples (or lack thereof)

Laboratory challenges

Physiology

Page 10: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Do pathologists have a role?

‘Why are you involved, this is a herd health/epidemiology/microbiology problem’

Herd approach

Males are expendable

Define the disease

Page 11: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

The awakening

Failure is not a bad thing

Put on a positive spin.

Expectation, expectation, expectation (prognosis)

Page 12: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Conception

Estrus activity

Mating

Fertilization

Page 13: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Postpartum subclinical endometritis of dairy cattle

Cytology

• Steven Leblanc

• Ram Kasimanickam et al

• Cyril Stephen

Uterine biopsy

Page 14: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

General microbial environment

Sterile environment

Ovaries

Uterine tubes

Uterus

Cervix

Contamination

Cranial vagina

Caudal vagina

Vulva

Page 15: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Specific pathogens acquired Campylobacter fetus Tritrichomonas foetus

mummification

Ureaplasma Amnionitis Plante, Ruhnke, Miller

Chlamydophila Papp, Halbert, Shewen

Viruses

Low pathogenicity/toxicity

Page 16: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Defences

Innate Conformation

Barrier Cervical barrier

Epithelium

Uterine tone, contraction and secretions

Microbial Pattern Recognition Receptors (PRR) and Pathogen associated Molecular Patterns (PAMP)

TLR, β-defensins

Neutrophils and macrophages

Compliment

Cytokines

Adaptive

Humoral

Cell mediated

Telma da Mata Martinsa, Tatiane Alves da Paixãob, Érica Azevedo Costaa, Alexandre de Carvalho Pires a, Renato Lima Santosa, Álan Maia Borgesa (2011) Postpartum toll-like receptors and B-defensin 5 mRNA levels in the endometrium of Holstein cows. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology 139 (2011) 277–281

Page 17: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Conceptus enters uterus

Cow day 3

Sow day 2

Defences have time to deal with uterine environment

Page 18: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Maternal recognition of pregnancy

Bovine IFN-t is anti-PGF.

Luteostasis inhibits oxytocin production by CL

Pig Progesterone is continuously produced

Fetal estrogens, PGE2/PGF2 ratio

Oxytocin secreted by endometrium

AJ Ziecik, A Waclawik, MM Kaczmarek, A Blitek, B Moza Jalali and A Andronowska (2011) Mechanisms for the Establishment of Pregnancy in the Pig. Reprod Dom Anim 2011 46 (S3); 31-44

Page 19: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Placental attachment

Cow day 16

Pig day 13

Page 20: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Pregnancy is a paradox

Foetus is an allograftPlacenta attaches, it doesn’t implant

Kristen Lackey

Page 21: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Placenta

Great immunological importance transfer of antibodies

tolerance

regulation of foetal development

release of cytokines

many lymphocytes and immune cells

Inflammatory cells and cytokines used to maintain pregnancy

T.M. Chucri, J.M. Monteiro, A.R. Lima, M.L.B. Salvadori, J.R. Kfoury Junior, M.A. Miglino. 2010. A review of immune transfer by the placenta. J Reprod Immunol 2010 87: 14-20

Page 22: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Placenta

Protection

Nutrition

Respiration

Endocrine control.

G. Schuler, H. Greven, M. P. Kowalewski, B. Döring, GR Özalp , B Hoffmann (2008). Placental steroids in cattle: hormones, placental growth factors or by-products of trophoblast giant cell differentiation? Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 2008 116 429-437

Page 23: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Antibody transfer

All – 0

Transfer if placentitis

Requires colostrum

Failure of passive transfer.

Page 24: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Immune tolerance

Fetus is genetically different

Inert

Immune modification

Transfer of cells, nutrients and wastes between mother and fetus

Uterus is temporarily immune privileged

No agreement as to how.Hansen PJ (2011) The Immunology of Early Pregnancy in Farm Animals. Reprod Dom Anim 2011 46 (S3): 18-30

Page 25: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Trophoblast is key

Effective foreign object

MHC 1 expression

Fas/Fas ligand system Apoptosis of activated immune cells expressing

Fas (trophoblasts have FasL)

Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase Degrades tryptophan, inactivates T cells

What about the NK cells?

Page 26: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Placenta - human/primate speak

‘A flat cake’ = disc

‘Membranes’ are a different structure

Photo complements of

common.wikimedia.org

Page 27: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Basic embryology

blastocyst

Page 28: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Formation of Chorion

Trophoblasts Inner cell mass

Trophoblasts (and mesoderm) form Chorion

Page 29: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Formation of endoderm

Endoderm = gut + yolk sac

Future fetus

Future chorion

Page 30: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Chorion

Gut

Fetus

Page 31: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Formation of Yolk sac

Chorion

Gut

Yolk sac

Fetus

Page 32: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Formation of Amnion

Chorion

Gut

Yolk sac

Fetus

Page 33: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Formation of amnion

Chorion

Gut

Yolk sac

Amniotic sac

Fetus

Page 34: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Formation of allantois

Chorion

Gut

Yolk sac

Amniotic sac

Fetus

Allantois

Page 35: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Formation of allantois

Chorion

Amniotic sac

Fetus

Yolk sacAllantois

Page 36: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 37: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Trophobasts

Recognition of pregnancy Bovine trophoblasts release IFN-t that inhibit COX-

2 expression and therefore PGF2α release –luteotrophic.

Immune barrier

Phagocytic Histotrophic nutrition

Hemophagic ‘organ’

Brucella abortus

Placentitis.

Page 38: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 39: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 40: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Uteroplacental unit

Cytokine balance

Prostaglandins F2α, E

Macrophages

NK cells

T cells

Page 41: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Establishment of pregnancy

Maternal recognition of pregnancy

Attachment

Immune modulation

Endocrine cross talk

Embryonic period (cow: 1 - 45 days)

Foetal periodF Lopez-Gatius, I Garcı´a-Ispierto (2010) Ultrasound and Endocrine Findings that Help to Assess the Risk of Late Embryo/Early Foetal Loss by Non-Infectious Cause in Dairy Cattle. Reprod Dom Anim 2010 45: (Suppl 3)15–24

Page 42: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Failure of pregnancy

Embryonic mortality

Page 43: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Embryonic mortality

Early embryonic mortality Most are Day 8 – 17 in cattle

Late embryonic - early foetal 10-12% are prior to day 90, but >20% in high

production herds - suboptimal progesterone

Chromosomal abnormalities Living cattle have traits that are heterozygous only! Twinning (25% of bovine twins die) Summer heat Alteration of immune profile.

F Lopez-Gatius, I Garcı´a-Ispierto (2010) Ultrasound and Endocrine Findings that Help to Assess the Risk of Late Embryo/Early Foetal Loss by Non-Infectious Cause in Dairy Cattle. Reprod Dom Anim 2010 45: (Suppl 3)15–24

Page 44: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Failure of Pregnancy

Abortion

Page 45: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Maternal disease

Systemic disease

Cytokine/inflammation

Stress and luteolysis

Ischemia/hypoxia

Hyperthermia

Page 46: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Infectious Failure of Pregnancy

Infection

Not all agents are as ‘pathogenic’ as we might expect.

Inflammation

This is more important than we think!

Alcina V. Carvalho Neta , Juliana P.S. Mol, Mariana N. Xavier, Tatiane A. Paixão, Andrey P. Lage, Renato L. Santos. (2010) Pathogenesis of bovine brucellosis. The Vet J 2010; 184:146–155

Page 47: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Infectious FOP: routes of infection

Ascending at mating STI’s

Tritrichomonas

Ureaplasma diversum

Ascend from vagina (not in ruminants and pigs)

Descending from ovary BVDV

Hematogenous Herpesvirus

Campylobacter

Toxoplasma

Page 48: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Normal uterus

Page 49: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Normal uterus

Page 50: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Normal Chorionic surface

Page 51: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Placentitis

Page 52: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 53: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 54: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 55: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 56: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 57: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Bovine FOP

No diagnosis 58

Noninfectious 1

Infectious 42 Bacteria 17

Protozoal 16

Viral 4

Fungal 4

Ureaplasma 2Jessica S. King, David J. Jenkins, John T. Ellis, Peter Fleming, Peter A. Windsor, Jan Šlapeta. (2011) Implications of wild dog ecology on the sylvatic and domestic life cycle of Neospora caninum in Australia. The Veterinary Journal 188 (2011) 24–33

Page 58: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 59: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 60: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Ovine Abortion*

No Diagnosis 48

Noninfectious 2

Infectious 50 Chlamydophila abortus 17

Campylobacter 4

Toxoplasma gondii 19

Coxiella burnetti 5

Virus (Border disease) 0

* Animal Health Laboratory, University of Guelph

Page 61: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Ruminant

Page 62: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Placentitis

Page 63: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Chlamydophila abortus

Page 64: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 65: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 66: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Pathogenesis

Exposure of mucous membranes Uterine discharge and fluids, aerosols. Carrier ewes – secretions at estrus Rams temporarily – semen, prepuce

Ewe develops Ab in 15 d, mild lesions for month, then latency.

Mononuclear cells in endometrium Endometrial cells of placentome, neutrophils control

infection here Trophoblasts around placentome Logarithmic growth of organism Necrosis, neutrophilic inflammation,

Page 67: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Individual history

Incubation (FOP) 50-90 days during gestation

Gestation 150 d. (138-159)

Infection early to middle gestation – abort.

Infection late in gestation – abort next gestation.

Ewe lambs abort at first pregnancy

Carrier state despite immunity.

Page 68: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Coxiella burnetii

Page 69: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Robert A. Heinzen, Ted Hackstadt and James E. Samuel (1999) Developmental biology of Coxiella burnetii. Trends in Microbiology 1999 7: 148-154

Page 70: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Focal necrosis

Page 71: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Toxoplasma gondii

Cat – rodent lifecycle

Cat sheds oocyts for 7 days post infection

Herbivores infected from contaminated feed –stored and pasture

Adults develop immunity

Infection during pregnancy Placental and fetal infection

Abortion with characteristic lesions, mummification, stillbirth, weak lambs

Page 72: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Necrotic tips

Page 73: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Foetus in FOP

Page 74: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Time of Death

12 hr cornea cloudy

24 -36 hr fluid in cavities

72 hr dehydration begins

144 mummy

Page 75: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 76: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 77: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Fetus en utero

Receives nutrients, oxygen, protection

Wastes are removed

Moves

Swallows

Doesn’t ‘breath’

Initiates parturition

Page 78: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Amorphous globosis

Page 79: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Hippomane

Page 80: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Adventitial placentation

Page 81: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Adventitial placentation

Page 82: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Amniotic plaques

Page 83: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Non-lesion lesions

Amorphous globosis (bovine)

Hippomane

Amniotic plaques

Theriogenology Question of the Month. JAVMA, Vol 238: 1261

Page 84: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Dystocia

Page 85: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 86: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Arthrogryposis

Definition

Pathogenesis Causes?

Cattle

Sheep

Goats

Pigs

Movement disorder

Lesions

Page 87: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Dermatitis

Page 88: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Anomalies

Page 89: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Congenital anomalies

Obvious anomalies

Less obvious anomalies

No look, no find

Cleft palate

Osteopetrosis

Lethal defects with no lesions.

Page 90: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Iodine deficiency

Page 91: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Thyroid disease

Goitre

Iodine deficiency

Goitrogenic substances

Dyshormonogenic

Page 92: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Heart failure

Photo complements of Dr RB Miller

Page 93: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Campylobacter

Photo complements of Dr D Wilson

Page 94: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Summary

Expectation, expectation, expectation.

Sporadic vs outbreak

Maternal, fetal, placental

Page 95: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Birth

Adjustments

Breathing

Circulation

Page 96: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Breathing

Inhibited before birth

Lungs atelectatic

Begins immediately

Hypoxia

Compression of umbilical cord

Premature separation of placenta

Excessive contraction of uterus (maternal supply)

Intracranial hemorrhage

Page 97: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Expansion of lungs

Surface tension of pulmonary fluid keeps it collapsed

First breath requires large amount of negative pressure, second is easier

Page 98: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Circulatory readjustments

Fetal circulation

Aorta is low resistance (and BP)

Pulmonary artery is high resistance.

Blood from umbilical vein bypasses the liver and enters vena cava to be shunted to the left through the foramen ovale (atria).

Blood from head of fetus goes to ventricle and across ductus arteriosis

Page 99: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Circulation at birth

Umbilical flow ceases, increases pressure in aorta

Foramen ovale closes – back pressure closes flap valve

Blood flow ceases through ductus arteriosis. High O2 tension causes it to close (prostaglandin keeps it open).

Ductus venosis closes

Page 100: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Stillbirth and perinatal mortality

Page 101: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Basic algorithm

Abortion or

Stillbirth or

Dystocia or

Neonatal mortality (breathed)

Page 102: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Size and maturity

Too small

Perinatal mortality

Placentitis

Lambs <3 kg

Too large

Lambs >5kg

Dystocia

Page 103: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Dystocia

Page 104: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 105: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 106: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 107: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 108: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 109: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 110: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 111: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Aspiration of amniotic contents

Page 112: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Bovine neonatal pancytopaenia

Bleeding calf syndrome

Pancytopaenia with leukopaenia and thrombocytopaenia

Association with a BVD vaccine

Immune mediated, colostrum related disease

Philip Simon Bridger, Rolf Bauerfeind, Lisa Wenzel, Natali Bauer, Christian Menge, Heinz-Jürgen Thiel, Manfred Reinacher, Klaus Doll. (2011) Detection of colostrum-derived alloantibodies in calves with bovine neonatal pancytopenia. Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology 141 (2011) 1–10

Page 113: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Female Genital Pathology

Page 114: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 115: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 116: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Retained foetal membranes

1. Reduced collagenase activity of fetalcotyledon-maternal caruncle interface. Foetal cortisol induction of placental enzymes Steroid synthesis from progesterone to estrogen upregulation of oxytocin receptors on the

myometrium secretion of prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2a). Prostaglandin initiates myometrial contractions

and lysis of the corpus luteum (CL). Lysis of the CL leads to secretion of relaxin and a

further decline in progesterone.

J.C. Beagley, K.J. Whitman, K.E. Baptiste, and J. Scherzer (2010) Physiology and Treatment of Retained Fetal Membranes in Cattle. J Vet Intern Med 2010;24:261–268

Page 117: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Retained foetal membranes

2. Increased serotonin inhibits separation High fetal and placental serotonin maintains

placental attachment

promotes placental cell proliferation and inhibits matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity.

3. Reduced leucocyte chemotaxis and activity

4. Reduced maternal immunological recognition of foetal MHC 1 molecules

5. Reduced cytokine production necessary for maturation and shedding of placenta

Page 118: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Retained Foetal Membranes – risk factors

Induced parturition Shortened gestation Abortion Twinning Dystocia Fetotomy Cesarean section Nutritional deficiencies - vitamin E, selenium, and carotene Infectious agents – BVDV Immunosuppression including dexamethasone for

induction Serum calcium and uterine tone

Page 119: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Disorders of Sexual Development

IntersexSex reversal

HermaphroditePseudohermaphrodite

Ambiguous development

Page 120: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Normal female development

Female specific genes are activated

WNT1, DAX1, FOXL2, are important genes

Upregulate FST (follistatin gene)

Paramesonephric ducts develop (WNT4)

Urogenital sinus – vulva, part of vagina.

Urogenital tubercle - clitorus

Page 121: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Normal male development

SRY gene, TDF, WT1+KTS, GATA4 and FOG2 - Sertoli cell

differentiation SOX9 – testis determining pathway SF1 activates AMH gene and inhibits the

paramesonephric duct WNT responsible for mesonephric duct

development Interstitial cells produce testosterone External genitalia develop from urogenital sinus

and tubercle.

Page 122: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Basis of new nomenclature -pathogenesis

Genetic Chromosomes (XX, XY, X_ mosaics, chimeras) Genes (SRY)

Gonadal Testis Ovary Ovotestis dysgenesis

Phenotype

Hughes IA (2008) Disorders of sex development: a new definition and classification. Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 22 (1): 119-134.

Page 123: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 124: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Chromosomal DSD

Aneuploidy

X_ - Turner

XXX – Trisomy X

XXY - Kleinfelter

Mosaics and Chimeras

Chimera (XX/XY) cells of different zygotes fuse – Freemartin

Mosaic – non disjunction in a single zygote

Page 125: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Freemartinism

Twin and single born freemartins

XX/XY chimera

Ovary but paramesophric ducts don’t develop.

Masculinized external genitalia

A.M. Padula (2005) The freemartin syndrome: an update. Anim Reprod Sci(2005) 87: 93–109

Page 126: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 127: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Goat – Polled intersex syndromeXX testicular DSD

Page 128: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Polled intersex syndrome

XX testicular DSD

female tubular genitalia

Mammary glands

Phenotype male or female

PIS gene causes loss of FOXL2 locus and failure of aromatase (CYP19) expression

Pannetier M, Fabre S, Batista F, Kocer A, Renault L, Jolivet G. (2006) FOXL2 activates P450 aromatase gene transcription:towards a better characterization of the early steps of mammalian ovarian development J Mol Endocrinol 2006 36: 399-413

Page 129: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

XX DSD

Abnormal gonads

XX Gonadal dysgenesis DSD

XX Ovotesticular DSD

XX Testicular DSD

Normal gonads

XX ovarian DSD

Page 130: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Ovotestis – XX ovotestis

Page 131: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

XY DSD

Abnormal gonads

XY gonadal dysgenesis DSD

XY ovotesticular DSD

XY testicular regression DSD

Normal gonads

XY testicular DSD (PMDS, cryptorchidism)

Page 132: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Male Reproductive Pathology

Page 133: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Overview

Scrotum and contents

Testis

Epididymis

Spermatic cord

Accessory genital glands

Vesicular glands

Prostate

Penis and prepuce

Page 134: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Spermatic granuloma

Blood testis barrier

Sertoli cells

Basement membrane

Myoid cells

Immune suppression

‘Immune privilege’

Antiinflammatoryenvironment,

Page 135: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Immune suppression - why

Gametes develop after self-tolerance

Structure of spermatozoa

Foreign body reaction

Antigenic – adaptive immunity

Page 136: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Immune suppression - how

Macrophages – diminished capacity

Antiinflammatory cytokine environment

Immune cells

Somatic cells

Androgens

Suppress proinflammatory cytokines

Shift cytokine balance

Testicular dendritic cells suppress.

Page 137: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Physical barriers

Sertoli cells

Highly complex alteration of cell junctions to allow spermatogenesis

Peritubular cells

Pressure

Minimal barrier

Cytokines, growth and differentiation factors

Page 138: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Oxidative stress

Reactive oxygen species vs antioxidant systems High metabolism and cell generation Increasing oxidative stress

Toxicant exposure Chemotherapy Ionizing radiation Inflammation Varicocele Cryptorchidism Aging Torsion

R. John Aitken* and Shaun D. Roman. Antioxidant Systems and Oxidative Stress in the Testes. Adv Exp Med Biol 2008 636 154-71Terry t. Turner*{ and jeffrey j. Lysiak. (2009) Oxidative Stress: A Common Review Factor in Testicular Dysfunction. J Androl 2008 29 488-499

Page 139: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

New view of testis

Page 140: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Spermatogenesis

Interstitial endocrine cell

Sertoli cell

Peritubular myoid cell

Germ cell

Hormonal and biomolecular soup

Page 141: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Biomolecular soup

Androgens and estrogens

Inhibin and activins (TGF family)

Transferrin

IGF-1

Relaxin like factor

POLMC and β endorphin

Oxytocin

Toll-like receptors

Page 142: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Take home message

Hormonal, paracrine and autocrine interactions are complex

Interfer with soup = hypoplasia or degeneration

Oxidative stress is very important in disturbing soup.

Page 143: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Diagnostic case

Very large boar stud supplying major pork producer

Problem: Poor semen quality of young boars.

Approach: euthanasia and collection of reproductive tracts. Histology by several pathologists.

Page 144: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 145: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 146: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Small testes

Hypoplasia

Testes and epididymides are small at puberty

Degeneration/atrophy

Testes are smaller than they were

Occurs in hypoplastic testes

Epididymides larger than in hypoplasia alone

Page 147: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Hypoplasia - Degeneration

Mechanisms similar

Alteration of ‘biomolecular soup’

Timing of insult is different

Page 148: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Hypoplasia

Disorders of Sexual development Chromosomal DSD

XXY cat

XX DSD American Cocker, polled goat

XY DSD Persistent Müllerian duct syndrome

Cryptorchidism

‘Uncomplicated hypoplasia’

Page 149: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

‘Uncomplicated’ hypoplasia

XY SRY+ testicular DSD

Common in bulls

Scrotal circumference at puberty

Cull rate is up to 50% in some species

Page 150: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Testicular hypoplasia

Chromosomal anomalies

Genetic

Testicular artery branching and blood flow

BVDV

Nutrition

Page 151: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 152: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Cryptorchidism

XY SRY+ testicular DSD Genetic

Heredity basis

Hormonal Androgen?

Structural Fusion Gonadal ligaments

Other

Page 153: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Cryptorchidism Abdominal translocation

Insulin like peptide 3 Anti-Müllerian hormone

Transinguinal migration Gubernacular enlargement Intraabdominal pressure

Inguinoscrotal migration Androgen Genitofemoral nerve Calcitonin gene related protein

Ieuan A Hughes and Carlo L Acerini (2009) Factors controlling testis descent. European Journal of Endocrinology (2008) 159 S75–S82

Page 154: Reproductive Pathology What is new?
Page 155: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Testicular atrophy/degeneration

Age

Oxidative injury

Blood flow

Temperature

Chemicals

Hormones

Neoplasia

Nutrition

Page 156: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Degeneration

Page 157: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Orchitis!

Photo by Tracey Chenier

Page 158: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Bull

Spermatic granuloma of epididymal head

Page 159: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Ram

Page 160: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Ram

Page 161: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Spermatic cord

Deferent duct

Cremaster muscle

Pampiniform plexus

Nerves

Page 162: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Varicocele

Increased levels of oxidants and reduced antioxidants in semen of infertile men with varicocele. Fertil Steril 2010

Page 163: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Accessory genital glands

Ampullae

Prostate

Vesicular glands

Bulbourethral glands

Page 164: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Vesicular adenitis

Acute fibrinopurulent form

Chronic interstitial form

Page 165: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Penis and prepuce

Page 166: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Preputial eversion and prolapse

Page 167: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Forced deviation and hematoma

Page 168: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Neoplasia - fibropapilloma

Page 169: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Balanopreputial bands

Photo complements of Mosby and PBVD

Page 170: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Acknowledgements Dr Philip Ladds Dr Richard Miller

Dr Don Schlafer

OVC Pathobiology

Animal Health Laboratory, University of Guelph YagerBest Histovet (Antech Canada)

Drs Yager and Best

Histovet Surgical Pathology Dr Wilcock

Submitters and website visitors

Page 171: Reproductive Pathology What is new?

Sponsors

• Australian Animal Pathology Standards Program

Australian Society for Veterinary Pathology

Subcommittee on Animal Health Laboratory Standards

Animal Health Australia

• Charles Louis Davis Foundation