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No Evidence Older
Women Generate New Eggs
July
11, 2007
Science Daily — It is highly unlikely that older
women generate new eggs, report researchers at the University of South
Florida in collaboration with a center in China.
The USF study, published in the March 2007 issue of the journal
Developmental Biology and highlighted April 26, 2007 in Nature, counters the
controversial findings of reproductive endocrinologist Jonathan Tilly, PhD,
and his team of Harvard scientists.
Tilly’s work, published in 2004 in Nature with a follow-up study a year
later in Cell, challenged the biological dogma that mammals, including
women, are born with a limited lifetime supply of eggs. Tilly reported the
discovery of stem cells capable of migrating from bone marrow to mouse
ovaries and generating new eggs there. The research fueled hopes that a new
treatment – such as bone marrow transplantation – might one day help older
women regain their fertility.
Since then, other papers have refuted Tilly’s surprising finding that mice
can produce eggs throughout their lives. Now, David Keefe, MD, professor and
chair of Obstetrics and Gynecology at USF, and colleague Lin Liu, who also
holds a post at Sun Yat-Sen University in Guangzhou, China, say they can
find no evidence to support his hypothesis that women may generate new eggs
after birth.
The USF researchers searched for markers of stem cells or of meiotic cell
division in ovarian cells biopsied from 12 women between the ages of 28 and
53.
“Despite using the most sensitive methods available, we found no evidence of
any egg stem cells in human ovaries, demonstrating that Dr. Tilly’s findings
in mice do not apply to women,” Dr. Keefe said. “Dr. Tilly likely was seeing
non-egg cells which resemble eggs. Another reason his findings do not apply
to women could be because mice eggs are more resilient than women’s eggs.
The bottom line is that women should not expect stem cell therapy to treat
egg infertility or menopause in the foreseeable future.”
“This is a very important finding by a distinguished group of researchers
and clinician-scientists at USF Health which affirms the traditional dogma
of a finite period of fertility in women,” said Abdul S. Rao, MD, MA, DPhil,
senior associate vice president for USF Health and vice dean for research
and graduate affairs at the College of Medicine.
The traditional view of fertility holds that women are born with all their
eggs and they are released one by one (occasionally two) at each ovulation.
At menopause, few to no mature eggs are believed to remain in the ovaries.
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