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Human theca arises from ovarian stroma and is comprised of three discrete subtypes

Nicole Lustgarten Guahmich, Limor Man, Jerry Wang, Laury Arazi, Eleni Kallinos, Ariana Topper-Kroog, Gabriel Grullon, Kimberly Zhang, Joshua D. Stewart, Nina Schatz-Siemers, Sam H. Jones, Richard Bodine, Nikica Zaninović, Glenn Schattman, Zev Rosenwaks, Daylon James

2023Communications Biology31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Theca cells serve multiple essential functions during the growth and maturation of ovarian follicles, providing structural, metabolic, and steroidogenic support. While the function of theca during folliculogenesis is well established, their cellular origins and the differentiation hierarchy that generates distinct theca sub-types, remain unknown. Here, we performed single cell multi-omics analysis of primary cell populations purified from human antral stage follicles (1-3 mm) to define the differentiation trajectory of theca/stroma cells. We then corroborated the temporal emergence and growth kinetics of defined theca/stroma subpopulations using human ovarian tissue samples and xenografts of cryopreserved/thawed ovarian cortex, respectively. We identified three lineage specific derivatives termed structural, androgenic, and perifollicular theca cells, as well as their putative lineage-negative progenitor. These findings provide a framework for understanding the differentiation process that occurs in each primordial follicle and identifies specific cellular/molecular phenotypes that may be relevant to either diagnosis or treatment of ovarian pathologies.

Topics & Concepts

ThecaFolliculogenesisBiologyAntral follicleOvarian CortexStromaOvaryCell biologyOvarian follicleProgenitorEndocrinologyInternal medicineProgenitor cellStem cellImmunologyImmunohistochemistryMedicineEmbryoCryopreservationOvarian tissueReproductive Biology and FertilityOvarian function and disordersSperm and Testicular Function
Human theca arises from ovarian stroma and is comprised of three discrete subtypes | Litcius