Publications by authors named "Kay Elder"

Purpose: In our practice, testing hypo-fertile patients for circulating homocysteine (Hcy) and the two principal MTHFR SNPs (677C > T and 1298A > C) has been routine for the past 7 years. Couples carrying a genetic background known to be associated with the disease were proposed treatment regimens consisting of 5-methyl tetrahydrofolate (5-MTHF) together with nutritional support of the one-carbon cycle (1-CC). Some patients preferred to continue with folic acid (FA) as prescribed by their referring gynecologist/obstetrician: this gave us the opportunity to compare outcomes between the two groups of patients.

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The human blastocyst contains the pluripotent epiblast from which human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) can be derived. ACTIVIN/NODAL signaling maintains expression of the transcription factor NANOG and in vitro propagation of hESCs. It is unknown whether this reflects a functional requirement for epiblast development in human embryos.

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Article Synopsis
  • Many mammals, including mice, can delay development between conception and birth by entering a dormant state during the blastocyst stage.
  • Research shows that reducing the mTOR signaling pathway activity can induce this dormant state in human pluripotent stem cells and blastoids, leading to limited growth and development.
  • This discovery suggests that humans also have the ability to enter dormancy around the blastocyst stage, which could have important implications for reproductive therapies.
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During the first week of development, human embryos form a blastocyst composed of an inner cell mass and trophectoderm (TE) cells, the latter of which are progenitors of placental trophoblast. Here, we investigated the expression of transcripts in the human TE from early to late blastocyst stages. We identified enrichment of the transcription factors GATA2, GATA3, TFAP2C and KLF5 and characterised their protein expression dynamics across TE development.

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Article Synopsis
  • Development involves key interactions between the epiblast, trophectoderm, and hypoblast, which play crucial roles in forming the embryo, placenta, and yolk sac, respectively.
  • Recent studies using human embryos and stem cell models have revealed how these signaling interactions occur after implantation, with specific dependencies on factors like NODAL and BMP.
  • The research demonstrates both conserved and unique requirements for embryonic development in humans compared to mice, underscoring the importance of comparing different species to better understand human embryogenesis.
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  • * This study evaluated different methods for predicting gene regulatory networks (GRN) and found that using transcripts per million (TPM) for expression normalization yielded better predictions, with a focus on the MICA method based on mutual information.
  • * MICA successfully identified complex interactions within the early human development GRN, including the interaction of transcription factors JUND and TFAP2C, demonstrating a valuable pipeline for future single-cell multi-omics studies.
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Our understanding of the molecular events driving cell specification in early mammalian development relies mainly on mouse studies, and it remains unclear whether these mechanisms are conserved across mammals, including humans. We have shown that the establishment of cell polarity via aPKC is a conserved event in the initiation of the trophectoderm (TE) placental programme in mouse, cow and human embryos. However, the mechanisms transducing cell polarity into cell fate in cow and human embryos are unknown.

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Accurate chromosome segregation during meiosis is crucial for reproduction. Human and porcine oocytes transiently cluster their chromosomes before the onset of spindle assembly and subsequent chromosome segregation. The mechanism and function of chromosome clustering are unknown.

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Full-grown oocytes are transcriptionally silent and must stably maintain the messenger RNAs (mRNAs) needed for oocyte meiotic maturation and early embryonic development. However, where and how mammalian oocytes store maternal mRNAs is unclear. Here, we report that mammalian oocytes accumulate mRNAs in a mitochondria-associated ribonucleoprotein domain (MARDO).

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Medically assisted reproduction, now considered a routine, successful treatment for infertility worldwide, has produced at least 8 million live births. However, a growing body of evidence is pointing toward an increased incidence of epigenetic/imprinting disorders in the offspring, raising concern that the techniques involved may have an impact on crucial stages of early embryo and fetal development highly vulnerable to epigenetic influence. In this paper, the key role of methylation processes in epigenesis, namely the essential biochemical/metabolic pathways involving folates and one-carbon cycles necessary for correct DNA/histone methylation, is discussed.

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Methylation is an essential biochemical mechanism that is central to the transmission of life, and crucially responsible for regulating gametogenesis and continued embryo development. The methylation of DNA and histones drives cell division and regulation of gene expression through epigenesis and imprinting. Brain development and its maturation also depend on correct lipid methylation, and continued neuronal function depends on biogenic amines that require methylation for their synthesis.

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Human oocytes are prone to assembling meiotic spindles with unstable poles, which can favor aneuploidy in human eggs. The underlying causes of spindle instability are unknown. We found that NUMA (nuclear mitotic apparatus protein)-mediated clustering of microtubule minus ends focused the spindle poles in human, bovine, and porcine oocytes and in mouse oocytes depleted of acentriolar microtubule-organizing centers (aMTOCs).

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Current knowledge of the transcriptional regulation of human pluripotency is incomplete, with lack of interspecies conservation observed. Single-cell transcriptomics analysis of human embryos previously enabled us to identify transcription factors, including the zinc-finger protein KLF17, that are enriched in the human epiblast and naïve human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). Here, we show that KLF17 is expressed coincident with the known pluripotency-associated factors NANOG and SOX2 across human blastocyst development.

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Assisted reproductive technology is today considered a safe and reliable medical intervention, with healthy live births a reality for many IVF and ICSI treatment cycles. However, there are increasing numbers of published reports describing epigenetic/imprinting anomalies in children born as a result of these procedures. These anomalies have been attributed to methylation errors in embryo chromatin remodelling during in vitro culture.

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Assessment of the endometrium often necessitates a biopsy, which currently involves an invasive, transcervical procedure. Here, we present an alternative technique based on deriving organoids from menstrual flow. We demonstrate that organoids can be derived from gland fragments recovered from menstrual flow.

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Article Synopsis
  • Human embryo development involves significant shape changes after implantation, but the specific molecular processes are not fully understood in humans, unlike in mice.
  • Researchers studied events in human embryos between implantation and gastrulation using single-cell analysis, highlighting that embryonic epiblast cells shift through different states and produce FGF signals for tissue growth.
  • They identified a unique group of extra-embryonic hypoblast cells that could serve as an anterior signaling center, influencing the development of the embryo's front and back (anterior-posterior axis).
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Most human embryos are aneuploid. Aneuploidy frequently arises during the early mitotic divisions of the embryo, but its origin remains elusive. Human zygotes that cluster their nucleoli at the pronuclear interface are thought to be more likely to develop into healthy euploid embryos.

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Methylation is a universal biochemical process which covalently adds methyl groups to a variety of molecular targets. It plays a critical role in two major global regulatory mechanisms, epigenetic modifications and imprinting, via methyl tagging on histones and DNA. During reproduction, the two genomes that unite to create a new individual are complementary but not equivalent.

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Current understandings of cell specification in early mammalian pre-implantation development are based mainly on mouse studies. The first lineage differentiation event occurs at the morula stage, with outer cells initiating a trophectoderm (TE) placental progenitor program. The inner cell mass arises from inner cells during subsequent developmental stages and comprises precursor cells of the embryo proper and yolk sac.

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Article Synopsis
  • The research investigates the signalling pathways that regulate early human development by analyzing transcriptomics datasets, focusing on insulin and IGF1 receptors and their ligand.
  • The study creates a specialized culture medium using IGF1 and Activin, enabling the maintenance of pluripotent stem cells without FGF signalling, while producing viable stem cell lines capable of genetic modification and differentiation.
  • It also reveals active PI3K/AKT/mTOR signalling in early human embryos, suggesting that insights from human blastocysts can help optimize culture conditions that mimic embryonic environments more effectively.
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