Asymmetric nuclear reprogramming in somatic cell nuclear transfer

Despite the progress achieved over the last decade after the birth of the first cloned mammal, the efficiency of reproductive cloning remains invariably low. However, research aiming at the use of nuclear transfer for the production of patient-tailored stem cells for cell/tissue therapy is progressi...

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Veröffentlicht in:BioEssays 2008, Vol.30 (1), p.66-74
Hauptverfasser: Loi, Pasqualino, Beaujean, Nathalie, Khochbin, Saadi, Fulka, Josef Jr, Ptak, Grazyna
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 66
container_title BioEssays
container_volume 30
creator Loi, Pasqualino
Beaujean, Nathalie
Khochbin, Saadi
Fulka, Josef Jr
Ptak, Grazyna
description Despite the progress achieved over the last decade after the birth of the first cloned mammal, the efficiency of reproductive cloning remains invariably low. However, research aiming at the use of nuclear transfer for the production of patient-tailored stem cells for cell/tissue therapy is progressing rapidly. Yet, reproductive cloning has many potential implications for animal breeding, transgenic research and the conservation of endangered species. In this article we suggest that the changes in the epi-/genotype observed in cloned embryos arise from unbalanced nuclear reprogramming between parental chromosomes. It is probable that the oocyte reprogramming machinery, devised for resident chromosomes, cannot target the paternal alleles of somatic cells. We, therefore, suggest that a reasonable approach to balance this asymmetry in nuclear reprogramming might involve the transient expression in donor cells of chromatin remodelling proteins, which are physiologically expressed during spermatogenesis, in order to induce a male-specific chromatin organisation in the somatic cells before nuclear transfer. BioEssays 30:66-74, 2008. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/bies.20684
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subjects Animals
Blastocyst
Cellular Reprogramming - physiology
Cloning, Organism
Development Biology
DNA Methylation
Embryonic Development - genetics
Life Sciences
Models, Biological
Nuclear Transfer Techniques
Reproduction, Asexual
Reproductive Biology
title Asymmetric nuclear reprogramming in somatic cell nuclear transfer
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