Sister kinetochore splitting and precocious disintegration of bivalents could explain the maternal age effect

2015 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Sister kinetochore splitting and precocious disintegration of bivalents could explain the maternal age effect​
Zielinska, A. P; Holubcova, Z.; Blayney, M.; Elder, K. & Schuh, M. ​ (2015) 
eLife4 art. e11389​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.11389 

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Authors
Zielinska, Agata P; Holubcova, Zuzana; Blayney, Martyn; Elder, Kay; Schuh, Melina 
Abstract
Aneuploidy in human eggs is the leading cause of pregnancy loss and Downs syndrome. Aneuploid eggs result from chromosome segregation errors when an egg develops from a progenitor cell, called an oocyte. The mechanisms that lead to an increase in aneuploidy with advanced maternal age are largely unclear. Here, we show that many sister kinetochores in human oocytes are separated and do not behave as a single functional unit during the first meiotic division. Having separated sister kinetochores allowed bivalents to rotate by 90 degrees on the spindle and increased the risk of merotelic kinetochore-microtubule attachments. Advanced maternal age led to an increase in sister kinetochore separation, rotated bivalents and merotelic attachments. Chromosome arm cohesion was weakened, and the fraction of bivalents that precociously dissociated into univalents was increased. Together, our data reveal multiple age-related changes in chromosome architecture that could explain why oocyte aneuploidy increases with advanced maternal age.
Issue Date
2015
Journal
eLife 
ISSN
2050-084X
Extent
19
Language
English

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