2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0120775
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Diet-Induced Obesity in Male C57BL/6 Mice Decreases Fertility as a Consequence of Disrupted Blood-Testis Barrier

Abstract: Obesity is a complex metabolic disease that is a serious detriment to both children and adult health, which induces a variety of diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, type II diabetes, hypertension and cancer. Although adverse effects of obesity on female reproduction or oocyte development have been well recognized, its harmfulness to male fertility is still unclear because of reported conflicting results. The aim of this study was to determine whether diet-induced obesity impairs male fertility and furthe… Show more

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Cited by 143 publications
(140 citation statements)
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“…Actually, obese men are more likely to exhibit a reduction in semen quality than men with a normal weight and responsible to high risk of infertility. Consistently, abnormal sperm parameters including reduced sperm motility, decreased sperm counts and increased sperm deformity are also observed in the animal models with diet-induced obesity, thereby result in male subfertility , Fernandez et al 2011, Fan et al 2015. On the other hand, it was verified that many factors altered in obese male may impair sperm quality including sexual hormone imbalance, oxidative stress and chronic inflammation.…”
Section: Obesity Impairs Sperm Parametersmentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…Actually, obese men are more likely to exhibit a reduction in semen quality than men with a normal weight and responsible to high risk of infertility. Consistently, abnormal sperm parameters including reduced sperm motility, decreased sperm counts and increased sperm deformity are also observed in the animal models with diet-induced obesity, thereby result in male subfertility , Fernandez et al 2011, Fan et al 2015. On the other hand, it was verified that many factors altered in obese male may impair sperm quality including sexual hormone imbalance, oxidative stress and chronic inflammation.…”
Section: Obesity Impairs Sperm Parametersmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…Similarly, declined sperm acrosome reaction induced by calcium ionophore A23187 is also observed in diet-induced obese mouse model (Fan et al 2015). Although the correlation between male obesity and sperm acrosome reaction is sparsely documented, it is reasonable that the impact of obesity on spermatogenesis and sperm maturation, which results in oxidative stress and membranous lipids alteration, may also cause some defects in acrosome reaction.…”
Section: Obesity Impairs Sperm Parametersmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…We next questioned whether challenging male ΔCpt2 mice with a high-fat diet would result in more severe skeletal and metabolic phenotypes, since high-fat diet feeding and the ensuing accumulation of adipose tissue increases estrogen levels in males ( Figure 5A) (44,45). Cohorts of 4-week-old male control and ΔCpt2 mice were fed a high-fat diet (60% of calories from fat) for 8 weeks before analysis.…”
Section: Skeletal Accumulation Of Fatty Acidsmentioning
confidence: 99%