Oocyte aging

Oocyte aging is a progressive decline in oocyte quality and reproductive potential, driven by age-related stressors that impair cellular homeostasis. Its central mechanisms include oxidative stress, reactive oxygen species-mediated damage, and mitochondrial dysfunction, with the review emphasizing that this decline is progressive with age. The condition is also linked to disruption of redox balance by epigenetic dysregulation and changes in the ovarian microenvironment. Clinically and biologically, it is relevant to female reproductive aging and reduced fertility, and it is exacerbated in settings such as cystic ovaries and endometriosis. Recent review literature highlights ROS-induced oocyte deterioration as a key pathway and frames oocyte aging as a multifactorial process integrating environmental and endogenous stressors. A 2026 GeroScience review (PMID:41952008) synthesizes these mechanisms and their impact on reproductive potential.

Reproductive aging and oocyte competence

  • Age-related decline in oocyte quality and reproductive potential is the core feature of oocyte aging, driven by oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. (PMID:41952008)
  • The review emphasizes progressive decline with age as the central focus, linking it to cumulative environmental and endogenous stressors. (PMID:41952008)
  • ROS-induced oocyte deterioration is highlighted as a mechanism underlying impaired oocyte competence. (PMID:41952008)

Oxidative stress and mitochondrial mechanisms

Disease and microenvironment associations