Litcius/Paper detail

Gene mutations impede oocyte maturation, fertilization, and early embryonic development

Cai‐feng Fei, Liquan Zhou

2022BioEssays36 citationsDOI

Abstract

Reproductive diseases are a long-standing problem and have become more common in the world. Currently, 15% of the world's population suffers from infertility, and half of them are women. Maturation of oocytes, successful fertilization, and high-quality embryos are prerequisites for pregnancy. With the development of assisted reproductive technology and advanced genetic assays, we have found that infertility in many young female patients is caused by mutations in various developmental regulators. These pathogenic factors may result in impediment of oocyte maturation, failure of fertilization or early embryonic development arrest. In this review, we categorize these clinically-identified, mutated genetic factors by their molecular characteristics: nuclear factors (PALT2, TRIP13, WEE2, TBPL2, REC114, MEI1 and CDC20), cytoplasmic factors (TLE6, PADI6, NLRP2/5, FBXO43, MOS and BTG4), a factor unique to primates (TUBB8), cell membrane factor (PANX1), and zona pellucida factors (ZP1-3). We compared discrepancies observed in phenotypes between human and mouse models to provide clues for clinical diagnosis and treatment of related reproductive diseases.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyInfertilityOocyteHuman fertilizationZona pellucidaEmbryogenesisPopulationGeneticsEmbryoAndrologyBioinformaticsPregnancyMedicineEnvironmental healthReproductive Biology and FertilityRenal and related cancersGenetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal Abnormalities