apoptosis maintains oocyte quality in aging caenorhabditis elegans females细胞凋亡维护老化卵母细胞质量线虫雌.pdf
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Apoptosis Maintains Oocyte Quality in Aging
Caenorhabditis elegans Females
Sara Andux, Ronald E. Ellis*
Department of Molecular Biology, UMDNJ School of Osteopathic Medicine, Stratford, New Jersey, United States of America
Abstract
In women, oocytes arrest development at the end of prophase of meiosis I and remain quiescent for years. Over time, the
quality and quantity of these oocytes decreases, resulting in fewer pregnancies and an increased occurrence of birth
defects. We used the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to study how oocyte quality is regulated during aging. To assay
quality, we determine the fraction of oocytes that produce viable eggs after fertilization. Our results show that oocyte
quality declines in aging nematodes, as in humans. This decline affects oocytes arrested in late prophase, waiting for a signal
to mature, and also oocytes that develop later in life. Furthermore, mutations that block all cell deaths result in a severe,
early decline in oocyte quality, and this effect increases with age. However, mutations that block only somatic cell deaths or
DNA-damage–induced deaths do not lower oocyte quality. Two lines of evidence imply that most developmentally
programmed germ cell deaths promote the proper allocation of resources among oocytes, rather than eliminate oocytes
with damaged chromosomes. First, oocyte quality is lowered by mutations that do not prevent germ cell deaths but do
block the engulfment and recycling of cell corpses. Second, the decrease in quality caused by apoptosis mutants is mirrored
by a decrease in the size of many mature oocytes. We conclude that competition for resources is a serious problem in aging
germ lines, and that apoptosis helps alleviate this problem.
Citation: Andux S, Ellis RE (2008) Apoptosis Maintains Oocyte Quality in Aging
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