Literature DB >> 10202934

Unique checkpoints during the first cell cycle of fertilization after intracytoplasmic sperm injection in rhesus monkeys.

L Hewitson1, T Dominko, D Takahashi, C Martinovich, J Ramalho-Santos, P Sutovsky, J Fanton, D Jacob, D Monteith, M Neuringer, D Battaglia, C Simerly, G Schatten.   

Abstract

Intracytoplasmic sperm injection has begun an era of considerable improvements in treating male infertility. Despite its success, questions remain about the dangers of transmitting traits responsible for male infertility, sex and autosomal chromosome aberrations and possible mental, physical and reproductive abnormalities. We report here the first births of rhesus monkeys produced by intracytoplasmic sperm injection at rates greater or equal to those reported by clinics. Essential assumptions about this process are flawed, as shown by results with the preclinical, nonhuman primate model and with clinically discarded specimens. Dynamic imaging demonstrated the variable position of the second meiotic spindle in relation to the first polar body; consequently, microinjection targeting is imprecise and potentially lethal. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection resulted in abnormal sperm decondensation, with the unusual retention of vesicle-associated membrane protein and the perinuclear theca, and the exclusion of the nuclear mitotic apparatus from the decondensing sperm nuclear apex. Male pronuclear remodeling in the injected oocytes was required before replication of either parental genome, indicating a unique G1-to-S transition checkpoint during zygotic interphase (the first cell cycle). These irregularities indicate that the intracytoplasmic sperm injection itself might lead to the observed increased chromosome anomalies.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Non-programmatic

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10202934     DOI: 10.1038/7430

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Med        ISSN: 1078-8956            Impact factor:   53.440


  24 in total

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8.  Assisted fertilization and embryonic axis formation in higher primates.

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9.  Chromosome analysis of mouse zygotes produced by intracytoplasmic injection of spermatozoa exposed to acrosome reaction inducing agents methyl-beta-cyclodextrin and calcium ionophore A23187.

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10.  YA is needed for proper nuclear organization to transition between meiosis and mitosis in Drosophila.

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