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Female eggs grown in male testes
Nature ^
| February 28, 2005
| Helen Pearson
Posted on 03/03/2005 12:47:13 PM PST by billorites


|
What makes an egg an egg? © SPL |
|
To say that eggs grow only in females and sperm grow only in males seems a pretty uncontroversial statement. But Japanese researchers have shown that it's not as simple as that, by nurturing female eggs in the testes of male mice.
In a growing mouse embryo, the cells that will become the testes or ovaries, known as germ cells, start out the same in both sexes. In males, a gene on the Y chromosome called Sry switches on about halfway through gestation and prompts these undecided cells to develop into testes containing sperm. Females lack Sry and, by default, develop ovaries and eggs.
But what happens if you have a female germ cell surrounded by male cells? Will it be influenced by the male signals around it and become a sperm, or will it follow its own genetic path and become an egg?
Masaru Okabe at Osaka University and his colleagues expected the former, but to find out for sure they sandwiched together cells from male and female embryos and allowed the 'chimeric' embryos to grow into mice.
As suggested by previous studies, most of the female cells growing in the testes of the male mice abandoned their genetic legacy and went through the early stages of sperm development. Okabe found that signals from surrounding cells with an active Sry gene triggered these female cells to start up a pattern of gene activity that is normally only found in male cells.
But some of the female cells that lodged in the testes developed partly into eggs, the researchers report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences1. The eggs were able to fuse with sperm, but did not develop into embryos. "It was a big surprise," says Okabe, who dubbed the cells 'testicular eggs'.
Cell pockets
Testicular eggs are not entirely new. A study 25 years ago reported eggs that seemed to grow in male mice2. But that was simply based on the shape and size of the cells. Okabe's study is the first to use modern genetic techniques to confirm that such cells are genetically female.
The idea of eggs growing in the testes is "a nice concept", says Wolf Reik, who studies egg and sperm development at The Babraham Institute in Cambridge, UK. He suspects that the eggs are able to develop because they grow in a little of pocket of female cells within the testis.
The researchers hope their studies will help scientists to understand what goes wrong when the testes develop in patients with chromosomal sex disorders. In Klinefelter syndrome, for example, males carry an additional X chromosome and budding sex cells disappear. Okabe says that the chimeric mice could help explain exactly what happens to these cells and why.
TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: biology; disorders; genetics; testicle
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To: Coleus
2
posted on
03/03/2005 12:47:44 PM PST
by
Calpernia
(Breederville.com)
To: billorites
Er, can't say I like the implications of this.
3
posted on
03/03/2005 12:48:42 PM PST
by
skeeter
("A nation without borders is not a nation" RW R)
To: skeeter
4
posted on
03/03/2005 12:49:56 PM PST
by
Borges
To: skeeter
Sounds like self-impregnation is on the way.
5
posted on
03/03/2005 12:50:12 PM PST
by
G32
To: G32
Yea, just imagine where the egg would gestate!
OOOOWWWWW!
6
posted on
03/03/2005 12:50:57 PM PST
by
ruiner
To: billorites
It used to be that the Lesbo / Feminazis used to say that they did not need men to continue the race. Now the inverse appears to be true as well.
7
posted on
03/03/2005 12:51:59 PM PST
by
taxcontrol
(People are entitled to their opinion - no matter how wrong it is.)
To: skeeter
There is an axiom that I've come to trasure in the web development industry...Just because you can, doesn't mean you should!
I'm sure I could show how cells can grow on metal by putting a knife through your shoulder, but that doesn't mean I should do it.
8
posted on
03/03/2005 12:52:02 PM PST
by
dannyboy72
(How long will you hold onto the rope when Liberals pull us off the cliff?)
To: billorites
That does not sound like it would be a pleasant birth.
9
posted on
03/03/2005 12:53:51 PM PST
by
CzarNicky
(The problem with bad ideas is that they seemed like good ideas at the time.)
To: dannyboy72
"I'm sure I could show how cells can grow on metal by putting a knife through your shoulder, but that doesn't mean I should do it."Somewhere there is a pierced freak contemplating a test run.
To: billorites
To: ruiner
OOOOWWWWW!Ask a woman who's had an extrauterine pregnancy.
12
posted on
03/03/2005 12:56:24 PM PST
by
js1138
To: billorites
That would be no big deal. For a while.
13
posted on
03/03/2005 12:59:22 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(Please correct if cosmic balance requires.)
To: billorites
Female eggs grown in male testes Why?
14
posted on
03/03/2005 1:00:14 PM PST
by
infidel29
(America is GREAT because she is GOOD, the moment she ceases to be GOOD, she ceases to be GREAT- B.F.)
To: billorites
More evidence that one day the traditional family will be obsolete. Khrushchev was right. Socialism is inevitable.
15
posted on
03/03/2005 1:00:30 PM PST
by
beeler
(Shoot first, ask questions later.)
To: billorites; NYer
I wish they'd spend their time finding a cure for diseases.
To: skeeter
17
posted on
03/03/2005 1:02:59 PM PST
by
billorites
(freepo ergo sum)
To: Calpernia; 2ndMostConservativeBrdMember; afraidfortherepublic; Alas; al_c; american colleen; ...
Why are they doing this?
Seems there are more important things to do, diseases to cure, lives to save....
18
posted on
03/03/2005 1:04:36 PM PST
by
Coleus
(I support ethical, effective and safe stem cell research and use: adult, umbilical cord, bone marrow)
To: TheSpottedOwl
Jonas Salk found the big one. Is there another one so important and so big that needs attention?
19
posted on
03/03/2005 1:04:53 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(Please correct if cosmic balance requires.)
To: billorites
gonna leave some nasty and painful stretch marks!
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