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New Insights into the Genetic Regulation of Homologue Disjunction in Mammalian Oocytes

Mammalian oocytes execute a unique meiotic programme involving 2 arrest stages and an unusually protracted preamble to chromosome segregation during the first meiotic division (meiosis I). How mammalian oocytes successfully navigate their exceptional meiotic journey has long been a question of immen...

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Autor principal: Homer, H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: S. Karger AG 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3225260/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21335952
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000324118
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author Homer, H.
author_facet Homer, H.
author_sort Homer, H.
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description Mammalian oocytes execute a unique meiotic programme involving 2 arrest stages and an unusually protracted preamble to chromosome segregation during the first meiotic division (meiosis I). How mammalian oocytes successfully navigate their exceptional meiotic journey has long been a question of immense interest. Understanding the minutiae of female mammalian meiosis I is not merely of academic interest as 80–90% of human aneuploidy is the consequence of errors arising at this particular stage of oocyte maturation, a stage with a peculiar vulnerability to aging. Recent evidence indicates that oocytes employ many of the same cast of proteins during meiosis I as somatic cells do during mitosis, often to execute similar tasks, but intriguingly, occasionally delegate them to unexpected and unprecedented roles. This is epitomised by the master cell-cycle regulon, the anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C), acting in concert with a critical APC/C-targeted surveillance mechanism, the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). Together, the APC/C and the SAC are among the most influential entities overseeing the fidelity of cell-cycle progression and the precision of chromosome segregation. Here I review the current status of pivotal elements underpinning homologue disjunction in mammalian oocytes including spindle assembly, critical biochemical anaphase-initiating events, APC/C activity and SAC signalling along with contemporary findings relevant to progressive oocyte SAC dysfunction as a model for age-related human aneuploidy.
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spelling pubmed-32252602011-12-01 New Insights into the Genetic Regulation of Homologue Disjunction in Mammalian Oocytes Homer, H. Cytogenet Genome Res Genetic Regulation of Chromosome Segregation Mammalian oocytes execute a unique meiotic programme involving 2 arrest stages and an unusually protracted preamble to chromosome segregation during the first meiotic division (meiosis I). How mammalian oocytes successfully navigate their exceptional meiotic journey has long been a question of immense interest. Understanding the minutiae of female mammalian meiosis I is not merely of academic interest as 80–90% of human aneuploidy is the consequence of errors arising at this particular stage of oocyte maturation, a stage with a peculiar vulnerability to aging. Recent evidence indicates that oocytes employ many of the same cast of proteins during meiosis I as somatic cells do during mitosis, often to execute similar tasks, but intriguingly, occasionally delegate them to unexpected and unprecedented roles. This is epitomised by the master cell-cycle regulon, the anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C), acting in concert with a critical APC/C-targeted surveillance mechanism, the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). Together, the APC/C and the SAC are among the most influential entities overseeing the fidelity of cell-cycle progression and the precision of chromosome segregation. Here I review the current status of pivotal elements underpinning homologue disjunction in mammalian oocytes including spindle assembly, critical biochemical anaphase-initiating events, APC/C activity and SAC signalling along with contemporary findings relevant to progressive oocyte SAC dysfunction as a model for age-related human aneuploidy. S. Karger AG 2011-04 2011-02-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3225260/ /pubmed/21335952 http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000324118 Text en Copyright © 2011 by S. Karger AG, Basel http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/). Users may download, print and share this work on the Internet for noncommercial purposes only, provided the original work is properly cited, and a link to the original work on http://www.karger.com and the terms of this license are included in any shared versions.
spellingShingle Genetic Regulation of Chromosome Segregation
Homer, H.
New Insights into the Genetic Regulation of Homologue Disjunction in Mammalian Oocytes
title New Insights into the Genetic Regulation of Homologue Disjunction in Mammalian Oocytes
title_full New Insights into the Genetic Regulation of Homologue Disjunction in Mammalian Oocytes
title_fullStr New Insights into the Genetic Regulation of Homologue Disjunction in Mammalian Oocytes
title_full_unstemmed New Insights into the Genetic Regulation of Homologue Disjunction in Mammalian Oocytes
title_short New Insights into the Genetic Regulation of Homologue Disjunction in Mammalian Oocytes
title_sort new insights into the genetic regulation of homologue disjunction in mammalian oocytes
topic Genetic Regulation of Chromosome Segregation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3225260/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21335952
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000324118
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