Growth Factors in Normal Ovarian Follicle Development

1996 ◽  
Vol 14 (03) ◽  
pp. 179-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda Giudice ◽  
Nicholas Cataldo ◽  
H.J.H.M. van Vessel ◽  
O.W. Yap ◽  
Yasmin Chandrasekher
2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 ◽  
pp. 4-4
Author(s):  
J. P. Hanrahan ◽  
M. Mullen

Exceptionally high prolificacy in the Cambridge and Belclare breeds has been shown to be attributable to point mutations in genes (BMP15 and GDF9) that code for oocyte derived growth factors which have profound effects on ovarian follicle development. The BMP15 gene is X linked while GDF9 is autosomal (chromosome 5). Two different BMP15 mutations are present in the Belclare population (FecXG and FecXB) but only one of these (FecXG) was found in the Cambridge while the GDF9 mutation (FecGH) was common to both breeds. The Inverdale and Hanna mutations in NZ Romney sheep (Davis et al. 2001) are point mutations in BMP15 but involve different codons from those involved in Cambridge and Belclare. It is of interest to know whether the mutations common to Cambridge and Belclare are likely to have had a common ancestral source or arose independently. The Lleyn breed was a common source of genetic material in the genesis of both breeds. Thus, the foundation ewes for the Cambridge included three Lleyn ewes (Owen,1976) while a set of 13 Lleyn sheep selected for high litter size was a major contributor to the Belclare breed (accounted for 50% of the genetic material at one stage; subsequently diluted to about 25%). The hypothesis is that the Lleyn was the likely source of the two mutations common to Belclare and Cambridge.


Development ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-18
Author(s):  
J. M. Legay

Ovarian follicle development, which accompanies morphogenesis of the silkworm egg has three distinct phases: spheric, ellipsoidal and flattened-ellipsoid. Transitions between phases are rapid and form-stability (characterized by length/width ratio) is preserved from the beginning of the ellipsoidal phase. The geometric stability of the follicle-oocyte-ovariole system, the polarity of the egg and the determinism in form changes reveal strikingly coordinated spatial and temporal organization.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (38) ◽  
pp. 10131-10136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yahav Yosefzon ◽  
Cfir David ◽  
Anna Tsukerman ◽  
Lilach Pnueli ◽  
Sen Qiao ◽  
...  

The TET enzymes catalyze conversion of 5-methyl cytosine (5mC) to 5-hydroxymethyl cytosine (5hmC) and play important roles during development. TET1 has been particularly well-studied in pluripotent stem cells, butTet1-KO mice are viable, and the most marked defect is abnormal ovarian follicle development, resulting in impaired fertility. We hypothesized that TET1 might play a role in the central control of reproduction by regulating expression of the gonadotropin hormones, which are responsible for follicle development and maturation and ovarian function. We find that all three TET enzymes are expressed in gonadotrope-precursor cells, butTet1mRNA levels decrease markedly with completion of cell differentiation, corresponding with an increase in expression of the luteinizing hormone gene,Lhb. We demonstrate that poorly differentiated gonadotropes express a TET1 isoform lacking the N-terminal CXXC-domain, which repressesLhbgene expression directly and does not catalyze 5hmC at the gene promoter. We show that this isoform is also expressed in other differentiated tissues, and that it is regulated by an alternative promoter whose activity is repressed by the liganded estrogen and androgen receptors, and by the hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone through activation of PKA. Its expression is also regulated by DNA methylation, including at an upstream enhancer that is protected by TET2, to allowTet1expression. The down-regulation of TET1 relieves its repression of the methylatedLhbgene promoter, which is then hydroxymethylated and activated by TET2 for full reproductive competence.


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