%0 Journal Article %T Polycystic ovary syndrome resembling histopathological alterations in ovaries from prenatal androgenized female rats %A Fang Wang %A Bolan Yu %A Wenjing Yang %A Jianqiao Liu %A Jiachun Lu %A Xuefeng Xia %J Journal of Ovarian Research %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1757-2215-5-15 %X A rat model of PCOS was established by injecting dehydroepiandrosterone sulfoconjugate (DHEAS) into pregnant females. Rats were administered with DHEAS (60£¿mg/kg/d) subcutaneously (s.c.) for all 20£¿days of pregnancy (Group A), or for the first 10£¿days (Group B), or from day 11 to day 20 (Group C). Controls were administered with injection oil (0.2£¿ml/day) s.c. throughout pregnancy (Group D). The litter rate, abortion rate, and offspring survival rate in each group were recorded. Serum androgen and estrogen were measured and the morphological features of the ovaries were examined by light and electron microscopy in the offspring of each group.We found that rats injected with DHEAS throughout pregnancy (group A) lost fertility. Rats injected with DHEAS during early pregnancy (group B) exhibited more serious aberrations in fertility than both Group C, in which rats were injected with DHEAS during late pregnancy (P£¿<£¿0.05), and Group D (controls). There was a statistical difference of ovarian weight among female offspring in Group B, C and D (P£¿<£¿0.01). By light and electron microscopy, a significant morphological difference among the female offspring in the three groups was observed.Our results indicate that androgen excess during pregnancy can decrease rat fertility. Excess androgen at the early stage of pregnancy causes high reproductive toxicity, leading to abnormality of ovarian morphology and functions in female offspring. %K Prenatal androgenization %K Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) %K Ovarian %K Rat model %U http://www.ovarianresearch.com/content/5/1/15/abstract