BACKGROUND Oxidative stress might be associated with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), but relatively small studies published to date do not permit reaching a definitive conclusion. We aimed at conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies evaluating circulating markers of oxidative stress in patients with PCOS. METHODS We conducted a systematic review of studies reporting circulating markers of oxidative stress in women with PCOS and controls published up to June 2012, using Entrez PubMed and EMBASE online facilities. Meta-analysis calculated standardized mean differences (SMDs) and 95% confidence intervals (95CI). RESULTS From 1633 potential studies identified electronically, 68 studies, including 4933 PCOS patients and 3671 controls, were selected. For each of nine circulating markers of oxidative stress, an individual meta-analysis was conducted. Compared with control women, patients with PCOS presented higher circulating concentrations of homocysteine (23% increase, SMD 0.6, 95CI, 0.4-0.8), malondialdehyde (47% increase, SMD 1.9, 95CI 1.2-2.6) and asymmetric dimethylarginine (36% increase, SMD 1.1, 95CI 0.6-1.6), and increased superoxide dismutase activity (34% increase, SMD 1.0, 95CI 0.5-1.4) and decreased glutathione levels (50% decrease, SMD -3.7, 95CI -6.2 to -1.2) and paraoxonase-1 activity (32% decrease, SMD -0.9, 95CI -1.3 to -0.4). Similar results were found when restricting the analyses to studies in which patients and controls were matched for age and body mass index. CONCLUSIONS Circulating markers of oxidative stress are abnormal in women with PCOS independent of weight excess. This finding suggests that oxidative stress may participate in the pathophysiology of this common disorder.
The diversity and composition of the gut microbiota of young adults are influenced by the combined effects of sex, sex hormone concentrations, and obesity, presenting with specific abnormalities in women with PCOS.
The present results suggest that miRNAs that play an important role in metabolic and immune system processes are influenced by obesity and circulating androgen concentrations.
BACKGROUND:Abdominal adiposity and obesity influence the association of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) with insulin resistance and diabetes. We aimed to characterize the intermediate metabolism phenotypes associated with PCOS and obesity.
Lipid rafts are membrane microdomains with a higher amount of saturated fatty acids and sterols than the rest of the membrane. They are more resistant to the action of non-anionic detergents, and are called, for this reason, detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs). Lipid rafts are involved in many cellular processes, like signaling, cytokinesis, response to environment, etc., and therefore must contain important proteins. We have obtained a fraction enriched in proteins from Candida albicans DRMs. The sample has been analyzed by SDS-PAGE and 29 proteins have been identified including markers for lipid rafts in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, like Pma1p and a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein belonging to the Phr family. Ecm33p, a GPI-anchored protein involved in cell wall biogenesis, has been found for the first time in lipid rafts. We have also identified proteins implicated in protein glycosylation, like the mannosyltransferases Mnn7p, Pmt2p and Mnt1p; proteins involved in lipid metabolism, like Erg11p and Scs7p; and heat shock proteins, like Ssa1p and Hsp90p. Most of the proteins identified are located in plasma, mitochondrial, Golgi or ER membranes, supporting the postulated existence of lipid-raft domains in all the membranes.
The present results suggest that there is sexual dimorphism in some adipose tissue functions and that this dimorphism may be related to differences in androgen concentrations because women with PCOS show a masculinized pattern of expression of some adipokines.
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