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Portrait of an oocyte: our obscure origin
Roger Gosden, Bora Lee
Roger Gosden, Bora Lee
Published April 1, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2010;120(4):973-983. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI41294.
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Review Series Article has an altmetric score of 11

Portrait of an oocyte: our obscure origin

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Abstract

Oocytes play a pivotal role in the cycle of human life. As we discuss here, after emerging from germline stem cells in the fetus, they grow in a follicular niche in which development is harmonized for timely ovulation and hormone secretion after puberty. Most human oocytes have poor developmental competence and are peculiarly vulnerable to chromosomal malsegregation, especially as women pass the optimal years of fertility and may begin to turn to assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) and egg donation. Research needs to focus on the molecular factors involved and the environmental niche required for optimal development of oocytes, with the aim of increasing their numbers and quality for ARTs, since these are the factors that so often limit human fertility.

Authors

Roger Gosden, Bora Lee

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Figure 3

A rare case of mature human oocytes uniformly zona-free.

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A rare case of mature human oocytes uniformly zona-free.
(A) The zona pe...
(A) The zona pellucida was completely absent in all oocytes harvested from a patient with infertility. (B and C) The eggs formed pronuclei after ICSI and cleaved to the 2–4 cell stage in vitro (B), although they never generated an ongoing pregnancy when replaced in the uterus (C), even after transfer to evacuated zonae. Reproduced with permission from An Atlas of Human Gametes and Conceptuses (50).

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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