Egg's Energy Stores Key to Preserving FertilityOctober 07, 2005DURHAM, N.C. - An immature egg's internal nutrient supply is critical to its survival, an insight that offers a new route to understanding and treating infertility due to egg death, according to Duke University Medical Center researchers. As women age, their stockpile of immature eggs, called oocytes, diminishes through cell death, eventually leading to infertility. In studies with frog oocytes, the Duke researchers found that the nutrient storehouse, or yolk, plays a key role in regulating the survival of these cells. Depleting the nutrients triggers apoptosis - programmed cell death - and adding nutrients prolongs the life of eggs, they found. The study offers potential for developing oocyte-protective therapies for women undergoing chemotherapy, as well as potential targets for improved infertility treatments, the researchers said. "This discovery provides a basic science underpinning for understanding the mechanisms of oocyte death and a way to identify potential clinical treatments," said Sally Kornbluth, Ph.D., senior study author and an associate professor of pharmacology and cancer biology at Duke University Medical Center. Adds Leta Nutt, Ph.D., lead author of the study, "Our work provides evidence for a metabolic timer in which oocytes that use up their energy stores are fated to die." Nutt is a postdoctoral researcher in Duke's department of pharmacology and cancer biology. The results appear in the Oct. 7, 2005, issue of Cell. The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Sidney Kimmel Foundation for Cancer Research, the V Foundation for Cancer Research and the Triangle Community Foundation. Oocytes are one of the few cells to rely entirely on internal energy stores, receiving no nutrients from the body. Human oocytes have a relatively small nutrient stockpile compared to the frog oocytes studied by the Duke researchers. To explore the link between energy stores and apoptosis (cell death), the researchers both extended the lifetime of frog oocytes by feeding them nutrients and triggered apoptosis by mimicking a lack of nutrients. The oocytes lived longer when provided with the simple sugar building blocks needed to fuel metabolism, "like fattening them up to keep them alive," Kornbluth said. Further detective work revealed the reason why: a molecular pathway involved in metabolizing the sugar is directly linked to an enzyme called caspase-2, which causes apoptosis. Caspases are enzymes that chew up and destroy cells during the apoptosis process. When the Duke team "fed" the simple sugars to frog eggs and oocytes, they shut off apoptosis. Conversely, preventing eggs from metabolizing these sugars and using the molecular pathway quickly prompted cell death, the researchers found. The link between an egg's energy stores and the caspase-2 enzyme is especially important because previous studies showed that turning off caspase-2 in mice prevents oocytes from dying, even in response to toxic agents like chemotherapy drugs, said Seth Margolis, Ph.D., a study co-author and postdoctoral researcher in Duke's department of pharmacology and cancer biology. Also, female mice missing the gene to produce caspase-2 are born with an excess number of oocytes. "We've really demonstrated that caspase-2 is the thing required for oocyte death, and provided a specific molecular mechanism that can keep it shut off," Margolis said. Collaborators on the study include Mette Jensen, Catherine Herman and Jeffrey Rathmell of Duke, and William Dunphy of the California Institute of Technology. Duke University Medical Center |
|||||||||||||||||||||
| Related Infertility Current Events and Infertility News Articles Teen girls diagnosed with STI more likely to seek treatment for partners after watching video A study at Johns Hopkins Children's Center found that girls diagnosed with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) who watched a short educational video were three times more likely to discuss their condition with their partners and to ensure partner treatment than girls diagnosed and treated without seeing the film. NIH-funded researchers transform embryonic stem cells into human germ cells Researchers funded in part by the National Institutes of Health have discovered how to transform human embryonic stem cells into germ cells, the embryonic cells that ultimately give rise to sperm and eggs. IVF insurance coverage yields fewer multiple births, Yale researchers find The proportion of in vitro fertilization (IVF) multiple births was lower in the eight states that provide insurance coverage for couples seeking IVF treatment, primarily due to fewer embryos transferred per cycle. Identifying the metabolism of a healthy embryo could improve infertility treatment Embryos that are most likely to result in a pregnancy are crucial to the success of in vitro fertilization (IVF) but are difficult to identify. Researchers at Yale School of Medicine, led by Emre Seli, M.D., are developing a fast, non-invasive test to help assess embryo viability for IVF. New therapy for vasculitis will help patients avoid infertility and cancer Researchers have identified that Rituxan, a drug previously approved for the treatment of non-Hodgkin's B cell lymphoma and rheumatoid arthritis, can treat severe ANCA-associated vasculitis as effectively as cyclophosphamide, the current standard therapy. Drug could provide first treatment for scleroderma Investigators have identified a drug that is currently approved to treat certain types of cancer, Gleevec, that could provide the first treatment for scleroderma, a chronic connective tissue disease for which a treatment has remained elusive. Researchers identify mechanism that helps bacteria avoid destruction in cells Infectious diseases currently cause about one-third of all human deaths worldwide, more than all forms of cancer combined. Advances in cell biology and microbial genetics have greatly enhanced understanding of the cause and mechanisms of infectious diseases. Researchers Identify Gene with Possible Link to Infertility in Mice Virginia Commonwealth University researchers have identified the role of a gene in regulating molecular signals involved with ovarian follicle development, which may one day help shed light on some of the causes of fertility issues in humans. Possible Genetic Factor for Male Infertility Identified Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine researchers have discovered a gene involved with the production of sperm that may contribute to male infertility and lead to new approaches to male contraception. Master gene that switches on disease-fighting cells identified by scientists The master gene that causes blood stem cells to turn into disease-fighting 'Natural Killer' (NK) immune cells has been identified by scientists, in a study published in Nature Immunology today. More Infertility Current Events and Infertility News Articles |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||