Early Castration in Horses Does Not Impact Osteoarticular Metabolism

Author:

Rouge Marion1,Legendre Florence2ORCID,Elkhatib Razan1,Delalande Christelle1,Cognié Juliette3,Reigner Fabrice4,Barrière Philippe4,Deleuze Stefan5ORCID,Hanoux Vincent1,Galéra Philippe2ORCID,Bouraïma-Lelong Hélène1

Affiliation:

1. Université de Caen-Normandie, OeReCa, 14000 Caen, France

2. Université de Caen Normandie BIOTARGEN, 14000 Caen, France

3. INRAE, Université de Tours, Centre de Recherche de Tours, UMR PRC, 37380 Nouzilly, France

4. INRAE, Université de Tours, Centre de Recherche de Tours, UEPAO, 37380 Nouzilly, France

5. Université de Liège, 4000 Liège, Belgium

Abstract

The castration of stallions is traditionally performed after puberty, at around the age of 2 years old. No studies have focused on the effects of early castration on osteoarticular metabolism. Thus, we aimed to compare early castration (3 days after birth) with traditional castration (18 months of age) in horses. Testosterone and estradiol levels were monitored from birth to 33 months in both groups. We quantified the levels of biomarkers of cartilage and bone anabolism (CPII and N-MID) and catabolism (CTX-I and CTX-II), as well as of osteoarthritis (HA and COMP) and inflammation (IL-6 and PGE2). We observed a lack of parallelism between testosterone and estradiol synthesis after birth and during puberty in both groups. The extra-gonadal synthesis of steroids was observed around the 28-month mark, regardless of the castration age. We found the expression of estrogen receptor (ESR1) in cartilage and bone, whereas androgen receptor (AR) expression appeared to be restricted to bone. Nevertheless, with respect to osteoarticular metabolism, steroid hormone deprivation resulting from early castration had no discernable impact on the levels of biomarkers related to bone and cartilage metabolism, nor on those associated with OA and inflammation. Consequently, our research demonstrated that early castration does not disrupt bone and cartilage homeostasis.

Funder

Région Normandie

Ministère de l’Enseignement Supérieur

Fonds Eperon

GIS CENTAURE equine research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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