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Why Does Infertility Increase in Older Women?

by Dr. Lakshmi Venkataraman on April 3, 2017 at 10:43 PM
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Highlights:

Defective cell division in eggs leading to improper sharing of chromosomes could be a reason for the decrease in fertility that occurs in older women, according to scientists at the University of Montreal Hospital Research Center (CRCHUM).


Reason for the Study

It is already known that as a woman becomes older, her eggs are at an increased risk of becoming aneuploid, since the mechanism by which the chromosomes are held together goes awry. This is referred to as �loss of cohesion' hypothesis.

‘Identifying the defect that could reduce fertility in older women may lead to novel fertility treatments that could result in successful term pregnancies.’

The study authors wished to further examine how exactly this phenomenon might cause the decline in fertility that occurs with increasing maternal age.

"One of the main causes of female infertility is a defect in the eggs that cause them to have an abnormal number of chromosomes. These so-called aneuploid eggs become increasingly prevalent as a woman ages. This is a key reason that older women have trouble getting pregnant and having full-term pregnancies. It is also known that these defective eggs increase the risk of miscarriage and can cause Down's syndrome in full-term babies" explained Fitz Harris.

Methods and Findings of the Study

During their experiments, the research team analyzed the cell division in the eggs of older mice and observed that there was another problem namely defective alignment of microtubules leading to defective spindle formation.

They then took the experiment further and exchanged the nuclei of eggs between young mice between 6-12 weeks of age and older mice nearly 60 weeks old to assess how this would influence spindle formation.

"This shows that maternal age influences the alignment of microtubules independently of the age of the chromosomes contained in the nuclei of each egg." explained Shoma Nakagawa, a postdoctoral research fellow at the CRCHUM and at the Universit� de Montr�al.

The scientists conclude that defective spindle formation due to cell division going haywire could also occur in humans and might possibly explain why older women have difficulty becoming pregnant.

What is Aneuploidy?

Aneuploidy refers to the presence of abnormal number of chromosomes in the cell, either 45 or 47 in humans, instead of the usual 46 (23 pairs).

During meiotic cell division, a germ cell divides twice to produce 4 daughter cells, either 4 eggs or sperms that have only half the number of chromosomes or haploid state.

Due to some defect, during certain divisions of meiosis, instead of all 4 gametes containing equal number of chromosomes, one gamete ends up getting all the chromosomes of a pair, while the other gamete has no chromosomes at all.

In the presence of an extra or missing autosome (numbered chromosome), most embryos cannot survive and are automatically aborted.

The most frequent aneuploidy in humans is trisomy 16 and fetuses affected with the full version of this chromosome abnormality do not survive to term. The most common aneuploidy that proceed to term with infants surviving is Trisomy 21, which is found in Down's syndrome, affecting 1 in 800 births. Trisomy 18 (Edward's syndrome) occurs in 1 in 6,000 births, and Trisomy 13 (Patau Syndrome) affects 1 in 10,000 births.

What are Microtubules and Spindle Formation?

Microtubules are cylindrical structures in the nucleus of the cell that arrange themselves during cell division in the form of a spindle.

Spindle formation is necessary to ensure that the chromosomes from the parental cell is equally distributed into the 2 daughter cells. This process is called chromosomal segregation.

In conclusion, though more research to understand the exact molecular mechanisms leading to defective spindle formation may be necessary, it may one day become possible to correct the errors and ensure formation of healthy eggs that can be fertilized and proceed to full term pregnancy. This discovery could spur the development of newer fertility treatments offering hope to thousands of older women.

In the words of one of the authors, Fitz Harris, "We are currently exploring possible treatments for eggs that might one day make it possible to reverse this problem and rejuvenate the eggs."

References:

  1. Aneuploidy - (https:en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aneuploidy)


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