首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Estrogen related receptor beta (ERR-beta) is an orphan nuclear receptor specifically expressed in a subset of extra-embryonic ectoderm of post-implantation embryos. ERR-beta is essential for placental development since the ERR-beta null mutants die at 10.5dpc due to the placenta abnormality. Here, we show that the ERR-beta is specifically expressed in primordial germ cells (PGC), obviously another important cell type for reproduction. Expression of the ERR-beta mRNA in embryonic germ cells started at E11.5 as soon as PGC reached genital ridges, and persisted until E15-E16 in both sexes. Immunostaining with anti-ERR-beta antibody revealed that the ERR-beta protein is exclusively expressed in germ cells in both male and female gonads from E11.5 to E16. 5. To study function of the ERR-beta in PGC, we complemented placental defects of the ERR-beta null mutants with wild-type tetraploid embryos, and analyzed germ cell development in the rescued embryos. It was found that development of gonad and PGC was not apparently affected, but number of germ cells was significantly reduced in male and female gonads, suggesting that the ERR-beta appears to be involved in proliferation of gonadal germ cells. The rescued embryos could develop to term and grow up to adulthood. The rescued ERR-beta null male were found to be fertile, but both male and female null mutants exhibited behavioural abnormalities, implying that the ERR-beta plays important roles in wider biological processes than previously thought.  相似文献   

2.
Nanog expression in mouse germ cell development   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
  相似文献   

3.
The sex of chick embryos is diagnosed by cyto-karyological methods on skin fragments of 2-7 days' incubation before gonadal sex differentiation. In 44 males and 42 females statistical analyses have been made of the number and dimension of the germ cells, and of the volume of the gonadal primordia. Moreover an ultrastructural study has been made on the germ cells colonizing the genital ridges (70-hours of incubation). Early differences between the sexes have been found regarding: earlier numerical increase of CGs in the left gonadal primordium of the females; larger primordial germ cells in the female; the same cytological characteristics at ultrastructural level.  相似文献   

4.
Our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of primordial germ cell (PGC) proliferation in fish is rudimentary, but it is thought to be controlled by the surrounding somatic cells. We assumed that growth factors that are specifically involved in PGC proliferation are expressed predominantly in the surrounding genital ridge somatic cells. In order to isolate these growth factors, we compiled a complementary DNA (cDNA) subtractive library using cDNA from the genital ridges of 40-dpf rainbow trout embryos as the tester and cDNA from embryos without genital ridges as the driver. This approach identified a novel cytokine, designated gonadal soma-derived growth factor (GSDF), which is a member of the transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta superfamily. GSDF was expressed in the genital ridge somatic cells surrounding the PGCs during embryogenesis, and in both the granulosa and Sertoli cells at later stages. Inhibition of GSDF translation by antisense oligonucleotides suppressed PGC proliferation. Moreover, isolated testicular cells that were cultured with recombinant GSDF demonstrated dose-dependent proliferation of type-A spermatogonia; this effect was completely blocked by antiserum against GSDF. These results denote that GSDF, a novel member of the TGF-beta superfamily, plays an important role for proliferation of PGC and spermatogonia.  相似文献   

5.
This study was carried out to elucidate whether primordial germ cells, obtained from embryonic blood and transferred into partially sterilized male and female recipient embryos, could differentiate into functional gametes and give rise to viable offspring. Manipulated embryos were cultured until hatching and the chicks were raised until maturity, when they were mated. When the sex of the donor primordial germ cells and the recipient embryo was the same, 15 out of 22 male chimaeric chickens (68.2%) and 10 out of 16 female chimaeric chickens (62.5%) produced donor-derived offspring. When the sex of the donor primordial germ cells and the recipient embryo was different, 4 out of 18 male chimaeric chickens (22.2%) and 2 out of 18 female chimaeric chickens (11.1%) produced donor-derived offspring. The rates of donor-derived offspring from the chimaeric chickens were 0.6-40.0% in male donor and male recipient and 0.4-34.9% in female donor and female recipient. However, the rates of donor-derived offspring from the chimaeric chickens were 0.4-0.9% in male donor and female recipient and 0.1-0.3% in female donor and male recipient. The presence of W chromosome-specific repeating sequences was detected in the sperm samples of male chimaeric chickens produced by transfer of female primordial germ cells. These results indicate that primordial germ cells isolated from embryonic blood can differentiate into functional gametes giving rise to viable offspring in the gonads of opposite-sex recipient embryos and chickens, although the efficiency was very low.  相似文献   

6.
A single blastomere containing the "germ plasm" of 32-cell stage Xenopus embryos was cultured with [3H]thymidine until the control embryos developed to the neurula stage. The explants, showing a spherical mass in which the nuclei of all cells were labeled, were implanted into the prospective place of presumptive primordial germ cells (pPGCs) in the endodermal cell mass of unlabeled host embryos of the neurula stage. Labeled PGCs as well as unlabeled, host PGCs were found in the genital ridges of experimental tadpoles. This indicates that the precursor of germ cells, corresponding to pPGCs in normal embryos of the neurula stage, in the explants migrated to genital ridges just at the right moment to become PGCs, and suggests that the developmental process progressed normally, even in the explants, as far as the differentiation of pPGCs is concerned.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: The inactive X chromosome characteristic of female somatic lineages is reactivated during development of the female germ cell lineage. In mouse, analysis of protein products of X-linked genes and/or transgenes located on the X chromosome has indicated that reactivation occurs after primordial germ cells reach the genital ridges. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS/METHODOLOGY: We present evidence that the epigenetic reprogramming of the inactive X-chromosome is initiated earlier than was previously thought, around the time that primordial germ cells (PGCs) migrate through the hindgut. Specifically, we find that Xist RNA expression, the primary signal for establishment of chromosome silencing, is extinguished in migrating PGCs. This is accompanied by displacement of Polycomb-group repressor proteins Eed and Suz(12), and loss of the inactive X associated histone modification, methylation of histone H3 lysine 27. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We conclude that X reactivation in primordial germ cells occurs progressively, initiated by extinction of Xist RNA around the time that germ cells migrate through the hindgut to the genital ridges. The events that we observe are reminiscent of X reactivation of the paternal X chromosome in inner cell mass cells of mouse pre-implantation embryos and suggest a unified model in which execution of the pluripotency program represses Xist RNA thereby triggering progressive reversal of epigenetic silencing of the X chromosome.  相似文献   

8.
Whether all descendants of germline founder cells inheriting the germ plasm can migrate correctly to the genital ridges and differentiate into primordial germ cells (PGCs) at tadpole stage has not been elucidated in Xenopus. We investigated precisely the location of descendant cells, presumptive primordial germ cells (pPGCs) and PGCs, in embryos at stages 23-48 by whole-mount in situ hybridization with the antisense probe for Xpat RNA specific to pPGCs and whole-mount immunostaining with the 2L-13 antibody specific to Xenopus Vasa protein in PGCs. Small numbers of pPGCs and PGCs, which were positively stained with the probe and the antibody, respectively, were observed in ectopic locations in a significant number of embryos at those stages. A few of the ectopic PGCs in tadpoles at stages 44-47 were positive in TdT-mediated dUTP digoxigenin nick end labeling (TUNEL) staining. By contrast, pPGCs in the embryos until stage 40, irrespective of their location and PGCs in the genital ridges of the tadpoles at stages 43-48 were negative in TUNEL staining. Therefore, it is evident that a portion of the descendants of germline founder cells cannot migrate correctly to the genital ridges, and that a few ectopic PGCs are eliminated by apoptosis or necrosis at tadpole stages.  相似文献   

9.
Peanut lectin (PNA) or N-acetylgalactosamine (galNA, a part of the disaccharide unit which is recognized by PNA) was injected into the coelomic cavity of anuran larvae at the developmental stages during which the genital ridges were growing, and the effect of these compounds on the initial determination of gonadal sex was examined. The treatment with PNA tended to inhibit (or perturb) the expression of feminizing gene(s) in Rana japonica, and of both feminizing and masculinizing genes in R. nigromaculata. In contrast, treatment with galNA suppressed the expression of masculinizing gene(s) considerably. In terms of the initial determination of gonadal sex during normal development, these results suggest that the PNA-affinity molecule (PLAM) of primordial germ cells acts as a trigger for the expression of genes that control sexual differentiation of somatic cells. Furthermore, the somatic cells (perhaps mesenchymal and/or epithelial cells), which respond to the stimulus via the PLAM of primordial germ cells, may differ in terms of the threshold for such a response between genetic males and females. This result suggests the mesenchymal and/or epithelial cells are not sexually predetermined, but rather that sexual determination follows the response to some signal(s) mediated by the PLAM.  相似文献   

10.
The low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 4 gene (Lrp4) was identified by subtractive screening of cDNAs of the migratory primordial germ cells (PGCs) of E8.5-9.5 embryo and E3.5 blastocysts. Lrp4 is expressed in PGCs in the hindgut and the dorsal mesentery of E9.5 embryos, and in germ cells in the genital ridges of male and female E10.5-13.5 embryos. Lrp4 is also expressed in spermatogonia of the neonatal and adult testes and in the immature oocytes and follicular cells of the adult ovary. The absence of Lrp4 expression in the blastocyst, embryonic stem cells and embryonic germ cells suggests the Lrp4 is a molecular marker that distinguishes the germ cells from embryo-derived pluripotent stem cells.  相似文献   

11.
12.
To isolate the genes involved in mouse primordial germ cell (PGC) development, we carried out subtraction cDNA cloning between PGC-derived embryonic germ (EG) cells and inner cell mass-derived embryonic stem cells. Among the genes preferentially expressed in EG cells, we found a gene encoding a receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB3. By in situ hybridization and immunohistochemical staining, the expression of ErbB3 as well as that of ErbB2, a coreceptor for ErbB3, was detected in PGCs in genital ridges at 12.5 dpc (days postcoitum). The expression was, however, downregulated at 14.5 dpc when the PGCs underwent growth cessation. Neuregulin-beta, a ligand for ErbB2 and ErbB3, was also expressed in genital ridges. In addition, a recombinant Neuregulin-beta enhanced the number of PGCs in 12.5-dpc embryos in culture. Taken together, these observations suggest that ErbB signaling controls the growth or survival of PGCs in genital ridges.  相似文献   

13.
Developmental potency of primitive and embryonic ectoderm cells from 4.50-day to 6.25-day post-coitum (p.c.)mouse embryos and primordial germ cells from 12.50-day p.c. male genital ridges of fetal mice were studied by direct introducing them into 3.50-day p.c. blastocysts. Sixteen (61.5%) overt chimaeras out of 26(50%) offsprings were obtained after transfer of 52 blastocysts injected with 4.50-day primitive ectoderm cells; four (16.0%) overt chimaeras were obtained out of 25 (51.0%) offsprings with 4.75-day primitive ectoderm cells from 49 transferred blastocysts. However, no overt chimaera was obtained with either 5.25-day or 6.25day embryonic ectoderm cells or 12.50-day male primordial germ cells. GPI analysis of mid-gestation conceptuses developed from injected blastocysts showed that 5.25-day embryonic ectoderm cells could only contributed to yolk sac of conceptus. Results suggested that implantation acts as a trigger for the determination of primitive ectoderm cells, and their developmental potency becomes limited within a short period of time in normal development.  相似文献   

14.
Epigenetic reprogramming in mouse primordial germ cells   总被引:29,自引:0,他引:29  
Genome-wide epigenetic reprogramming in mammalian germ cells, zygote and early embryos, plays a crucial role in regulating genome functions at critical stages of development. We show here that mouse primordial germ cells (PGCs) exhibit dynamic changes in epigenetic modifications between days 10.5 and 12.5 post coitum (dpc). First, contrary to previous suggestions, we show that PGCs do indeed acquire genome-wide de novo methylation during early development and migration into the genital ridge. However, following their entry into the genital ridge, there is rapid erasure of DNA methylation of regions within imprinted and non-imprinted loci. For most genes, the erasure commences simultaneously in PGCs in both male and female embryos, which is completed within 1 day of development. Based on the kinetics of this process, we suggest that this is an active demethylation process initiated upon the entry of PGCs into the gonadal anlagen. The timing of reprogramming in PGCs is crucial since it ensures that germ cells of both sexes acquire an equivalent epigenetic state prior to the differentiation of the definitive male and female germ cells in which new parental imprints are established subsequently. Some repetitive elements, however, show incomplete erasure, which may be essential for chromosome stability and for preventing activation of transposons to reduce the risk of germline mutations. Aberrant epigenetic reprogramming in the germ line would cause the inheritance of epimutations that may have consequences for human diseases as suggested by studies on mouse models.  相似文献   

15.
During germ cell differentiation in mice, the genome undergoes specific epigenetic modifications. These include demethylation of imprinted genes and subsequent establishment of parental allele-specific methylation. The mouse Igf2r gene is an imprinted gene that shows maternal-specific expression. Maternal-specific methylation of differentially methylated region 2 (DMR2) of this gene may be necessary for its maternal-specific expression. Before the allele-specific methylation is established, DMR2 is demethylated in both male and female primordial germ cells (PGCs) by 13.5 days post coitum (dpc), indicating that the demethylation of this region occurs earlier in PGC development. The timing of the demethylation has been, however, unknown. In this study, we attempted to determine the timing of methylation erasure of Igf2r DMR2 in developing PGCs, using transgenic mice expressing green fluorescent protein specifically in the germ line. We purified migrating PGCs from the transgenic mice and examined the methylation status of DMR2. The results show that some CpG sites within DMR2 start demethylation at 9.5 dpc in some migrating PGCs, before the cells colonize genital ridges, and the progression of demethylation is rapid after colonization of the genital ridges. To examine whether the gonadal environment is involved in demethylation, we analyzed the methylation of DMR2 after culturing migrating PGCs in the absence of a gonadal environment. These culture experiments support the idea that a gonadal environment is not required for demethylation of the region in at least a fraction of PGCs.  相似文献   

16.
During embryogenesis, primordial germ cells (PGCs) have the potential to enter either spermatogenesis or oogenesis. In a female genital ridge, or in a non-gonadal environment, PGCs develop as meiotic oocytes. However, male gonadal somatic cells inhibit PGCs from entering meiosis and direct them to a spermatogenic fate. We have examined the ability of PGCs from male and female embryos to respond to the masculinising environment of the male genital ridge, defining a temporal window during which PGCs retain a bipotential fate. To help understand how PGCs respond to the male gonadal environment, we have identified molecular differences between male PGCs that are committed to spermatogenesis and bipotential female PGCs. Our results suggest that one way in which PGCs respond to this masculinising environment is to synthesise prostaglandin D(2). We show that this signalling molecule can partially masculinise female embryonic gonads in culture, probably by inducing female supporting cells to differentiate into Sertoli cells. In the developing testis, prostaglandin D(2) may act as a paracrine factor to induce Sertoli cell differentiation. Thus part of the response of PGCs to the male gonadal environment is to generate a masculinising feedback loop to ensure male differentiation of the surrounding gonadal somatic cells.  相似文献   

17.
In recent years, a large amount of data on gene expression at different stages of primordial germ cell (PGC) development has been acquired. The process of germ line segregation in various species is realized differently, i.e., as preformation or epigenesis. The review surveys the mechanisms of the initial lineage specification of mammalian and human germ cells. The data on PGC identification from their initial detection in the epiblast to gonadal anlagen where they migrate has been analyzed. Information on the PGC markers of the different development, the mechanisms of PGC migration towards genital ridges and the chemokines that direct migration are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
In germ cells, the function of which is to form the next generation, apoptotic cell death occurs during development, as in the case of somatic cells. In this study, we show that Bcl-x knockout heterozygous (Bcl-x(+/-)) mice exhibit severe defects in male germ cells during development. A substantial increase in apoptosis of male germ cells occurs at around embryonic day 13.5 (E13.5) in Bcl-x(+/-) embryos, leading to hypoplasia of postnatal testes and reduced fertility. On the other hand, female germ cells at the same stages do not show discernible differences between wild-type and Bcl-x(+/-) embryos. This phenotype of Bcl-x haploinsufficiency shows that regulation of apoptosis becomes different between the sexes at around the onset of sex differentiation. Through this study, we found that, in wild-type embryos, (1) apoptosis is much more frequent (approximately 10 times) in the male than in female germ cells, and (2) expression of Bcl-xL, but not that of Bax, is higher in female than in male germ cells, at around E13.5. Male fetal germ cells, cultured with gonadal somatic cells in vitro, showed higher frequencies of apoptosis than those cultured without gonadal somatic cells. On the other hand, in the absence of gonadal somatic cells, both male and female fetal germ cells in vitro showed similar frequencies of apoptosis to female fetal germ cells in vivo. Therefore, male germ cell apoptosis, of which the default pathway is similar to that of the female, is likely to be influenced by male gonadal environments.  相似文献   

19.
Ultraviolet (UV) irradiation of the vegetal pole of anuran embryos at the two-cell stage has been reported to cause aberrant cleavage as well as a subsequent reduction in germ cell numbers. In this study, we find no correlation between UV-induced cleavage abnormalities and the absence of primordial germ cells in Rana pipiens tadpoles examined at stage 25. On the other hand, some tadpoles from a population which was lacking primordial germ cells at stage 25 subsequently contained germ cells. These late-appearing germs cells exhibited damaged mitochondria, autophagosomes, and secondary lysosomes, while surrounding somatic cells were morphologically normal. We suggest that these cytoplasmic abnormalities resulted from an effect of the initial UV irradiation of germ plasm. We conclude that one effect of UV irradiation of germ plasm is to delay or inhibit the migration of primordial germ cells into the genital ridges.  相似文献   

20.
The presence of germ cells in the early gonad is important for sexual fate determination and gonadal development in vertebrates. Recent studies in zebrafish and medaka have shown that a lack of germ cells in the early gonad induces sex reversal in favor of a male phenotype. However, it is uncertain whether the gonadal somatic cells or the germ cells are predominant in determining gonadal fate in other vertebrate. Here, we investigated the role of germ cells in gonadal differentiation in goldfish, a gonochoristic species that possesses an XX-XY genetic sex determination system. The primordial germ cells (PGCs) of the fish were eliminated during embryogenesis by injection of a morpholino oligonucleotide against the dead end gene. Fish without germ cells showed two types of gonadal morphology: one with an ovarian cavity; the other with seminiferous tubules. Next, we tested whether function could be restored to these empty gonads by transplantation of a single PGC into each embryo, and also determined the gonadal sex of the resulting germline chimeras. Transplantation of a single GFP-labeled PGC successfully produced a germline chimera in 42.7% of the embryos. Some of the adult germline chimeras had a developed gonad on one side that contained donor derived germ cells, while the contralateral gonad lacked any early germ cell stages. Female germline chimeras possessed a normal ovary and a germ-cell free ovary-like structure on the contralateral side; this structure was similar to those seen in female morphants. Male germline chimeras possessed a testis and a contralateral empty testis that contained some sperm in the tubular lumens. Analysis of aromatase, foxl2 and amh expression in gonads of morphants and germline chimeras suggested that somatic transdifferentiation did not occur. The offspring of fertile germline chimeras all had the donor-derived phenotype, indicating that germline replacement had occurred and that the transplanted PGC had rescued both female and male gonadal function. These findings suggest that the absence of germ cells did not affect the pathway for ovary or testis development and that phenotypic sex in goldfish is determined by somatic cells under genetic sex control rather than an interaction between the germ cells and somatic cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号