1. Making the blastocyst: lessons from the mouse
- Author
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Cockburn, Katie and Rossant, Janet
- Subjects
Embryonic development -- Research -- Growth ,Embryonic stem cells -- Growth -- Research ,Blastocyst -- Growth -- Research ,Company growth ,Health care industry - Abstract
Mammalian preimplantation development, which is the period extending from fertilization to implantation, results in the formation of a blastocyst with three distinct cell lineages. Only one of these lineages, the epiblast, contributes to the embryo itself, while the other two lineages, the trophectoderm and the primitive endoderm, become extraembryonic tissues. Significant gains have been made in our understanding of the major events of mouse preimplantation development, and recent discoveries have shed new light on the establishment of the three blastocyst lineages. What is less clear, however, is how closely human preimplantation development mimics that in the mouse. A greater understanding of the similarities and differences between mouse and human preimplantation development has implications for improving assisted reproductive technologies and for deriving human embryonic stem cells., Introduction The period of preimplantation development in mammals, extending from egg fertilization to implantation of the blastocyst in the uterus, is a key stage during which the first three major [...]
- Published
- 2010
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