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Rat Eggs Cannot Wait: Spontaneous Exit From Meiotic Metaphase-II Arrest

Journal

MOLECULAR REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 78, Issue 10-11, Pages 795-807

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mrd.21385

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Framework Six Activity EURATools
  2. Scottish Stem Cell Network
  3. College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine
  4. Overseas Research Scheme
  5. Mary Orr Paterson Scholarship
  6. Medical Research Council [G0700711B] Funding Source: researchfish

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Mammalian eggs await fertilisation while arrested at the second metaphase stage of meiotic division. A network of signalling pathways enables the establishment and maintenance of this metaphase-II arrest. In the absence of fertilisation, mammalian eggs can spontaneously exit metaphase II when parthenogenetically stimulated, or sometimes without any obvious stimulation. Ovulated rat eggs abortively release from metaphase-II arrest once removed from egg donors. Spontaneously activated rat eggs extrude the second polar body and proceed to the so-called metaphase III-'like' stage, with clumps of condensed chromatin scattered in the egg cytoplasm. It is still unclear what makes rat eggs susceptible to spontaneous activation; however, a vague picture of the signalling pathways involved in the process of spontaneous activation is beginning to emerge. Such cell cycle instability is one of the major reasons why it is more difficult to establish nuclear transfer in the rat. This review examines the known predisposing factors and biochemical mechanisms involved in spontaneous activation. The strategies used to prevent spontaneous metaphase-II release in rat eggs will also be discussed.

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