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Publication : Geminin deletion in mouse oocytes results in impaired embryo development and reduced fertility.

First Author  Ma XS Year  2016
Journal  Mol Biol Cell Volume  27
Issue  5 Pages  768-75
PubMed ID  26764091 Mgi Jnum  J:314896
Mgi Id  MGI:6822787 Doi  10.1091/mbc.E15-06-0346
Citation  Ma XS, et al. (2016) Geminin deletion in mouse oocytes results in impaired embryo development and reduced fertility. Mol Biol Cell 27(5):768-75
abstractText  Geminin controls proper centrosome duplication, cell division, and differentiation. We investigated the function of geminin in oogenesis, fertilization, and early embryo development by deleting the geminin gene in oocytes from the primordial follicle stage. Oocyte-specific disruption of geminin results in low fertility in mice. Even though there was no evident anomaly of oogenesis, oocyte meiotic maturation, natural ovulation, or fertilization, early embryo development and implantation were impaired. The fertilized eggs derived from mutant mice showed developmental delay, and many were blocked at the late zygote stage. Cdt1 protein was decreased, whereas Chk1 and H2AX phosphorylation was increased, in fertilized eggs after geminin depletion. Our results suggest that disruption of maternal geminin may decrease Cdt1 expression and cause DNA rereplication, which then activates the cell cycle checkpoint and DNA damage repair and thus impairs early embryo development.
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