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Publication : Thirteen Ovary-Enriched Genes Are Individually Not Essential for Female Fertility in Mice.

First Author  Pham AH Year  2024
Journal  Cells Volume  13
Issue  10 PubMed ID  38786026
Mgi Jnum  J:348425 Mgi Id  MGI:7641804
Doi  10.3390/cells13100802 Citation  Pham AH, et al. (2024) Thirteen Ovary-Enriched Genes Are Individually Not Essential for Female Fertility in Mice. Cells 13(10):802
abstractText  Infertility is considered a global health issue as it currently affects one in every six couples, with female factors reckoned to contribute to partly or solely 50% of all infertility cases. Over a thousand genes are predicted to be highly expressed in the female reproductive system and around 150 genes in the ovary. However, some of their functions in fertility remain to be elucidated. In this study, 13 ovary and/or oocyte-enriched genes (Ccdc58, D930020B18Rik, Elobl, Fbxw15, Oas1h, Nlrp2, Pramel34, Pramel47, Pkd1l2, Sting1, Tspan4, Tubal3, Zar1l) were individually knocked out by the CRISPR/Cas9 system. Mating tests showed that these 13 mutant mouse lines were capable of producing offspring. In addition, we observed the histology section of ovaries and performed in vitro fertilization in five mutant mouse lines. We found no significant anomalies in terms of ovarian development and fertilization ability. In this study, 13 different mutant mouse lines generated by CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing technology revealed that these 13 genes are individually not essential for female fertility in mice.
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