Issue 7, 2019

Alteration in iron efflux affects male sex hormone testosterone biosynthesis in a diet-induced obese rat model

Abstract

This study was motivated by clinical observations that dysmetabolic iron overload syndrome (DIOS) and an androgen deficiency are common features observed in obese adult men; however, the molecular mechanism underlying the effects of DIOS on androgen deficiency remains to be elucidated. We established a DIOS animal model by feeding Sprague-Dawley rats an iron/fat-enriched diet (50% fat plus 0.25, 1, or 2 g ferric iron per kg diet) for 12 weeks to induce iron dysfunction (indicated by decreased tissue iron efflux) in obese rats. Obese rats fed an iron/fat-enriched diet showed decreased levels of testicular total Testosterone (T) and iron exporter ferroportin but increased levels of testicular iron and hepcidin, and these effects were more evident with a >1 g ferric iron per kg diet. A western blot analysis showed that an iron/fat-enriched diet triggered testicular endoplasmic reticular (ER) stress but decreased mitochondrion biogenesis proteins (PGC1α and TFAM) and T-converting proteins (StAR, CYP11A, and 17β-HSD). TUNEL staining showed that >1 g ferric iron induced apoptosis mainly in germ cells and Leydig's cells. Uncontrolled testicular iron efflux may cause mitochondrial-ER dysfunction and affect T biosynthesis. Future study targeting the testicular hepcidin–ferroportin axis may offer a therapeutic tool to alleviate testicular iron retention and mitochondrial-ER stress in Leydig's cells.

Graphical abstract: Alteration in iron efflux affects male sex hormone testosterone biosynthesis in a diet-induced obese rat model

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Sep 2018
Accepted
15 Jun 2019
First published
18 Jun 2019

Food Funct., 2019,10, 4113-4123

Alteration in iron efflux affects male sex hormone testosterone biosynthesis in a diet-induced obese rat model

A. L. Kurniawan, Y. Lee, C. Shih, R. Hsieh, S. Chen and J. Chang, Food Funct., 2019, 10, 4113 DOI: 10.1039/C8FO01870G

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