A phenotypic study of murine oocyte death in vivo.

J Reprod Dev

Department of Microbiology, College of Medicine, Dankook University, Korea.

Published: April 2004

Most studies of oocyte apoptosis have been performed in vitro and have employed the method of artificial induction of apoptosis by an anti-cancer agent. However, the process of oocyte death in vivo has not been clearly identified. To investigate the death process in unfertilized oocytes in vivo, we examined the cytochemical change of oocytes collected by oviduct flushing at various intervals after hCG injection. At each collection time, the collected oocytes were phenotypically classified under the microscope into four groups: single-cell oocytes (non-activated and without a nucleus and cytokinesis), activated oocytes (single-, 2- or 4-cell with a nucleus), fragmented oocytes, and dead oocytes. The number of single oocytes decreased and dead oocytes increased with the lapse of time, but the number of activated oocytes or fragmented oocytes did not. Also, most of the dead oocytes observed were single cell. At each time point, single oocytes were stained with anti-tubulin antibody to examine their spindle status. At 24 h after hCG injection, all ovulated oocytes had a normal bipolar spindle, while at 64 h all single-cell oocytes had no spindle. From these observations, we concluded that most oocyte deaths in vivo occur in the single oocyte stage, not in activated or fragmented oocytes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1262/jrd.50.179DOI Listing

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