In vitro fertilization
 Search     for          [ Advanced Search ]


    Browse   Add Article/Listing   What's Top   What's New   Featured   Tell a Friend   FAQ



  Categories

    News (917)
    Jobs & Resumes (52)
    Image Database (205)
    IVF Mail (614)
    Reviews (64)
    Links (97)
    Books & Videos (49)
    Clinics (215)
    Embryology courses (32)
    Tutorials (8)
    Writers (4)


  Sponsors

1.  ac-tive (IVF)
2.  CRi (Oosight)
3.  Cryolock
4.  Hamilton Thorne Research
5.  IVFonline
6.  MediCult
7.  Mellowood Medical Clinic Software
8.  Research Instruments
9.  Vitrolife
10.  Zander IVF


  Featured Listings


Vibration Isolation Systems



SynVitro Flush



  Online Now

Welcome, guest !
We have 0 members
and 41 guests online


  Recently Viewed

1.  Key fertilisation gene identified
2.  6th Royan international Research Award & Congress (Reproductive Biomedicine)
3.  IVF success improved by ultrasound embryo transfer
4.  Top UK IVF doctor rebuked by regulator
5.  British clinics scared to use improved IVF drugs
6.  3 pronuclei
7.  Poor turnout for Italy's fertility referendum
8.  Master of Medicine (MMed) / Master of Science in Medicine (MSc Med) - Sydney, Australia
9.  'Gay gene' donation row in New Zealand
10.  Electronic tags for IVF embryos


  IVF Support

1.  Resolve
2.  Infertility Network UK
3.  American Infertility Association
4.  Fertile Hope
5.  Egg Freezing
6.  Fertility Connect
7.  e-Infertility Network
8.  INCIID
9.  NISIG – Ireland


  IVF Tutorials

 
IVF


IVF > News

Key fertilisation gene identified

Dr. Kirsty Horsey
Progress Educational Trust
03 November 2005
Discuss this article Read comments Add to favorites

[BioNews, London] Researchers have pinpointed a key gene involved in the successful formation of a zygote (fertilised egg). The team, based at the University of Bath in the UK and the Centre de Genetique Moleculaire et Cellulaire in France, studied the role of the Hira gene during the first 15 minutes after fertilisation. Although they carried out the research on fruit fly eggs, the scientists - who published their findings in the journal Nature - say it is relevant to all sexually reproducing animals.

The crucial gene makes a protein called HIRA, which seems to be responsible for 'repackaging' the sperm's genetic material, once it has penetrated the egg. Mutations in this gene could explain why some fertilised eggs fail to develop into embryos, say the scientists. Team leader Tim Karr said that sperm DNA needs to be repackaged after it has entered the egg 'so that it can engage in normal cellular activities, including combining with the maternal DNA in the first act of genetic fertilisation'.

The team made their discovery by studying a strain of mutant fruit fly called 'sesame' (ssm), in which a mutation inherited from the female flies stops this process from happening. They looked at sperm DNA during the different stages of fertilisation in eggs from both normal and ssm flies. In the mutant flies, the DNA from the sperm remained coiled up in a tight ball, unable to interact with the DNA from the egg.

During the creation of fruit fly sperm cells, the DNA is tightly packaged up with a special set of sperm-specific proteins. However, after it has entered the egg cell, the DNA needs to be repackaged with ordinary DNA packaging proteins, called histones. 'A single gene, Hira, looks after this repackaging process', said Karr. UK biologist Wolf Reik, of the Babaraham Institute, described the discovery as 'really exciting'. He told the BBC news website that the finding could be 'an explanation for some types of infertility in humans; if there were females that carried this mutation, they would not be able to conceive normally'.



http://www.BioNews.org.uk
BioNews@progress.org.uk
© Copyright 2008 Progress Educational Trust

Reproduced from BioNews with permission, a web- and email-based source of news, information and comment on assisted reproduction and human genetics, published by Progress Educational Trust.


Page Views: 1572

 

Average Visitor Rating:    0.00 (out of 5)
Number of Ratings: 0 Votes
Rate This Article:
 Visitor comments (0)
Discuss this article Write a comment

(No comments found. You may write the first one!)





  IVF Jobs



IVF Jobs | Resumes

Click here to post your
job announcement



  Latest Listings

1.  HANDS-ON TRAINING ON INTRACYTOPLASMIC SPERM INJECTION & MOLECULAR GENETICS
2.  Obesity and diabetes may be linked with male infertility
3.  Study casts doubt over the use of acupuncture to improve IVF success rates
4.  Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill: postponed
5.  New study shows frozen embryos better than fresh for IVF


  Featured



  IVF Newsletter

Subscribe for the latest IVF news and announcements.
name
email
add   remove  


  Most Popular

1.  IVF success rates from US show age is all important
2.  IVF twins in demand
3.  Embryo quality and grading: The good, the bad or the ugly?
4.  Romanian woman set to become world's oldest mother
5.  First egg bank to open in the UK


  Talk to us



Name:  

E-mail:  



  IVF Videos

1.  Lysed Cell Removal
2.  Embryonic Division
3.  Professor Robert Edwards



Search Listings | Place Listings | Edit Listings | My Profile | My Favorites | Auto Notify | Sitemap | FAQ |
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Tell Your Friends | Refund Policy | ROR/RSS | Sponsorship and Advertising


embryo
Copyright © 1997-2008, IVF.net. All Rights Reserved.