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. 2003 Sep;18(9):1908-17.
doi: 10.1093/humrep/deg378.

Meiosis-activating sterol protects oocytes from precocious chromosome segregation

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Meiosis-activating sterol protects oocytes from precocious chromosome segregation

S Cukurcam et al. Hum Reprod. 2003 Sep.

Abstract

Background: Follicular fluid meiosis-activating sterol (FF-MAS) overcomes hypoxanthine (HX)-mediated meiotic arrest in mammalian oocytes.

Methods: In order to determine whether chromosome segregation was normal in oocytes matured in FF-MAS, the development, chromosomal constitution and chromosome alignment was analysed in spontaneously matured as well as HX-arrested mouse oocytes cultured in the absence or presence of FF-MAS.

Results: FF-MAS-induced meiotic maturation was significantly less effective compared with spontaneous maturation in supporting cytokinesis ( approximately 40 and approximately 90% polar body formation respectively). The majority of oocytes stimulated by FF-MAS to overcome the HX block developed to metaphase II (MII), but 23.4% of meiosis II oocytes were diploid. Chromosomes were well aligned on the spindle, and hyperploidy was low in spontaneously matured oocytes and HX-arrested oocytes cultured with or without FF-MAS. Unexpectedly, almost 40% of spontaneously matured MII oocytes contained chromatids/monads. Precocious loss of chromatid cohesion was significantly reduced in spontaneously matured as well as HX-arrested oocytes cultured in the presence of FF-MAS but not lanosterol.

Conclusions: FF-MAS induces full nuclear maturation to MII, and chromosomes segregate with high fidelity. However, in delayed FF-MAS-stimulated meiotic maturation, anaphase I may occur in the absence of cytokinesis. FF-MAS appears to protect mammalian oocytes from precocious chromatid segregation.

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