Litcius/Paper detail

Pluripotent Core in Bovine Embryos: A Review

Luis Águila, Claudia Osycka‐Salut, F. Treulen, Ricardo Felmer

2022Animals20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Early development in mammals is characterized by the ability of each cell to produce a complete organism plus the extraembryonic, or placental, cells, defined as pluripotency. During subsequent development, pluripotency is lost, and cells begin to differentiate to a particular cell fate. This review summarizes the current knowledge of pluripotency features of bovine embryos cultured in vitro, focusing on the core of pluripotency genes (OCT4, NANOG, SOX2, and CDX2), and main chemical strategies for controlling pluripotent networks during early development. Finally, we discuss the applicability of manipulating pluripotency during the morula to blastocyst transition in cattle species.

Topics & Concepts

Homeobox protein NANOGSOX2BlastocystInduced pluripotent stem cellBiologyEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyRex1EmbryoInner cell massEmbryogenesisGeneticsGenePluripotent Stem Cells ResearchAnimal Genetics and ReproductionTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine