| April
5, 2005
New Research On Multiple vs Single Births
May Offer New Approaches For Infertility
By Sue Pondrom
The multiple
“litter” births of mice, versus the normal singleton
pregnancy of humans, is due to defective processing in mice
of a common mammalian protein called bone morphogenetic protein
15 (BMP-15), according to new study by UCSD's School of Medicine
researchers.
Published online the
week of April 4, 2005 in Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, and appearing in the journal’s April
12, 2005 print edition, the study provides one of the first
insights into the physiological mechanisms responsible for multiple
births and suggests a potential therapeutic target for infertility
and contraception.
“Infertility
is a major problem for many couples,” said the study’s
senior author, Shunichi Shimasaki, Ph.D., UCSD professor of
reproductive medicine. “Based on our findings, it is possible
that therapeutic regimens targeting BMP-15 could offer exciting
new opportunities for novel treatments for female infertility.
On the other side of the coin, BMP-15 could also serve as a
new target for non-steroidal contraceptives.”
Recently, scientists
have found that BMP-15 produced by eggs developing in the ovary
plays an important role in determining ovulation quota, which
results in litter size in mammals. In laboratory studies with
human and mouse models, the UCSD team found specific differences
between mice and humans in the way BMP-15 is produced and secreted
by cells.
While BMP-15 was found
to be readily produced and normal in humans, its production
in mice was degraded before it could become a mature protein.
BMP-15 controls the number of follicles that become competent
to ovulate, resulting in singleton or twin gestations in humans
and sheep. In mice, however, the impaired BMP-15 caused early
development of follicles, leading to an increase in egg production
and ovulation.
“How humans restrict
their pregnancies to single or twin births while many other
animals have such large litters is a fundamental aspect of biology
that has remained poorly understood,” Shimasaki said.
“This research begins to provide some answers to this
very basic question of biology.”
The study was funded
by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National
Institute of Child and Human Development/NIH. The first author
was Osamu Hashimoto, Ph.D., a former post doctoral fellow in
the UCSD Department of Reproductive Medicine, and an additional
author was another former post doctoral fellow, R. Kelly Moore,
Ph.D., UCSD Department of Reproductive Medicine.
Media
Contact: Sue Pondrom
(619) 543-6163
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