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Development of mouse enucleated oocytes receiving a nucleus from different stages of the second cell cycle
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1992
Year
BiologyOocyteDevelopmental BiologyCell DivisionOogenesisGeneticsSecond Cell CyclePolar BodyMorphogenesisDifferent StagesCell CycleEmbryonic DevelopmentReproductive BiologyNuclear TransplantationMedicineCell BiologyEmbryology
The influence of the stage of the cell cycle of donor nuclei on the development of mouse oocytes enucleated at telophase I was examined. After nuclear transplantation and activation, a high proportion of the oocytes remodelled a nucleus, emitted a polar body and formed a pronuclear-like nucleus. Most of the reconstituted embryos that received an interphase nucleus 30-32 h or 34-36 h after treatment with human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) arrested at the 2-cell stage. The reconstituted embryos were able to develop to blastocysts when nuclei from late 2-cell embryos (44-46 and 48-50 h after hCG) were transferred to the oocytes. The resulting blastocysts were transferred to recipients and ten live young were obtained from the embryos that formed a pronuclear-like nucleus after extrusion of a polar body. Thus, the developmental ability of the reconstituted embryos was critically influenced by the stage of the cell cycle of the donor nuclei.