Literature DB >> 32892265

The unknown human trophectoderm: implication for biopsy at the blastocyst stage.

Angelo Tocci1.   

Abstract

Trophectoderm biopsy is increasingly performed for pre-implantation genetic testing of aneuploidies and considered a safe procedure on short-term clinical outcome, without strong assessment of long-term consequences. Poor biological information on human trophectoderm is available due to ethical restrictions. Therefore, most studies have been conducted in vitro (choriocarcinoma cell lines, embryonic and pluripotent stem cells) and on murine models that nevertheless poorly reflect the human counterpart. Polarization, compaction, and blastomere differentiation (e.g., the basis to ascertain trophectoderm origin) are poorly known in humans. In addition, the trophectoderm function is poorly known from a biological point of view, although a panoply of questionable and controversial microarray studies suggest that important genes overexpressed in trophectoderm are involved in pluripotency, metabolism, cell cycle, endocrine function, and implantation. The intercellular communication system between the trophectoderm cells and the inner cell mass, modulated by cell junctions and filopodia in the murine model, is obscure in humans. For the purpose of this paper, data mainly on primary cells from human and murine embryos has been reviewed. This review suggests that the trophectoderm origin and functions have been insufficiently ascertained in humans so far. Therefore, trophectoderm biopsy should be considered an experimental procedure to be undertaken only under approved rigorous experimental protocols in academic contexts.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cell junctions; Compaction; Human embryo; Polarization; Trophectoderm biopsy

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32892265      PMCID: PMC7642161          DOI: 10.1007/s10815-020-01925-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet        ISSN: 1058-0468            Impact factor:   3.412


  152 in total

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8.  Severe teratozoospermia and its influence on pronuclear morphology, embryonic cleavage and compaction.

Authors:  Dara S Berger; Faten Abdelhafez; Helena Russell; James Goldfarb; Nina Desai
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9.  Can trophectoderm RNA analysis predict human blastocyst competency?

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10.  Detection of human novel developmental genes in cDNA derived from replicate individual preimplantation embryos.

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  4 in total

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