Literature DB >> 12930570

Imaging meiotic spindles by polarization light microscopy: principles and applications to IVF.

David Keefe1, Lin Liu, Wei Wang, Celso Silva.   

Abstract

Meiotic spindles tether the chromosomes of oocytes and have been found to be structurally abnormal in older women. Conventional methods to image the meiotic spindle, such as immunostaining or transmission electron microscopy, require prior fixation, so they cannot be used clinically, and their utility in developmental studies is limited. Spindles can also be imaged non-invasively based on their birefringence, an inherent optical property of highly ordered molecules, such as microtubules, as they are illuminated with polarized light. Polarized light microscopy has been gainfully applied to embryology for decades, but recently a digital, orientation-independent polarized light microscope, the polscope, has demonstrated the exquisite sensitivity needed to image the low levels of birefringence exhibited by mammalian spindles. Its use of nearly circularly polarized light also produces orientation-independent measures of spindle birefringence, thus providing a method to quantify spindle architecture in living oocytes. The safety and utility of polscope imaging has been demonstrated in mammalian oocytes, including those from women undergoing ICSI. Spindle imaging with the polscope provides structural information closely related to the more invasive immunostaining method, and also enables study of the dynamic architecture of spindles. Profound effects of cooling on meiotic spindles have also been shown, and polscope imaging has been used to optimize thermodynamic stability of oocytes during ICSI. It has been shown that embryos derived from oocytes with normal, intact meiotic spindles exhibit superior development after fertilization and in-vitro culture. The mechanisms underlying age-related disruption of meiotic spindles in women remain unclear, but may relate to factors residing within the chromosomes themselves, since mice engineered to shorten their telomeres exhibit structurally abnormal spindles in their oocytes, and their embryos undergo cell cycle arrest and apoptosis, a phenotype remarkably similar to that observed in oocytes and embryos from older women. A time-lapse video of a mouse oocyte imaged by polscope may be purchased for viewing on the internet at www.rbmonline.com/Article/824 (free to web subscribers).

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12930570     DOI: 10.1016/s1472-6483(10)61724-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Reprod Biomed Online        ISSN: 1472-6483            Impact factor:   3.828


  18 in total

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2.  Polarized light microscopy-detectable structures of human oocytes and embryos are related to the likelihood of conception in IVF.

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Review 3.  The mammalian ovary from genesis to revelation.

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4.  Relationship between meiotic spindle characteristics in human oocytes and the timing of the first zygotic cleavage after intracytoplasmic sperm injection.

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5.  Polarized light microscopy in reproductive and developmental biology.

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6.  Chronic restraint stress disturbs meiotic resumption through APC/C-mediated cyclin B1 excessive degradation in mouse oocytes.

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7.  Laboratory evaluation in oocyte cryopreservation suggests retrieved oocytes are comparable whether frozen for medical indications, deferred reproduction or oocyte donation.

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8.  Maternal diabetes causes mitochondrial dysfunction and meiotic defects in murine oocytes.

Authors:  Qiang Wang; Ann M Ratchford; Maggie M-Y Chi; Erica Schoeller; Antonina Frolova; Tim Schedl; Kelle H Moley
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9.  Polarized light imaging of birefringence and diattenuation at high resolution and high sensitivity.

Authors:  Shalin B Mehta; Michael Shribak; Rudolf Oldenbourg
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10.  A simplified approach for oocyte enucleation in mammalian cloning.

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Journal:  Cell Reprogram       Date:  2013-11-12       Impact factor: 1.987

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