Human assisted conception: a cautionary tale. Lessons from domestic animals

Human Reproduction (Oxford, England), 13 Suppl 4(suppl 4), 184-202

DOI 10.1093/humrep/13.suppl_4.184 PMID 10091069

Abstract

A variety of embryo-based technologies used in farm animal reproduction, including embryo culture, nuclear transfer, embryo-somatic cell co-culture and asynchronous embryo transfer can lead to the production of large offspring; the so-called large calf/lamb syndrome. In some cases, abnormalities in the fetus and newborn are apparent. The nature of these associations is explored with emphasis on the biological differences between in-vivo- and in-vitro-produced embryos. A unifying framework and research programme aimed at explaining anomalies in early embryo development is then proposed in terms of the response of somatic cells and embryos to cellular stress. The review concludes with a caution against developments in assisted conception technologies, in man and domestic animals, being determined too much by the needs of commerce at the expense of research on the molecular, biochemical and physiological basis of early mammalian development.

Topics

assisted reproduction large offspring syndrome embryo culture, IVF safety lessons from animal reproduction domestic animals, Leese human assisted conception cautionary tale, in vitro embryo culture large calf lamb syndrome, embryo culture nuclear transfer somatic cell co-culture abnormalities, in vivo versus in vitro embryo biological differences, assisted reproductive technology safety concerns animal models, embryo stress response cellular development ART risks, IVF epigenetic concerns early embryo development, animal model embryo manipulation reproductive technology risks, assisted conception commerce versus research safety
PMID 10091069 10091069 DOI 10.1093/humrep/13.suppl_4.184 10.1093/humrep/13.suppl_4.184

Cite this article

Leese, H. J., Donnay, I., & Thompson, J. G. (1998). Human assisted conception: a cautionary tale. Lessons from domestic animals. *Human reproduction (Oxford, England)*, *13 Suppl 4*(suppl 4), 184-202. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/13.suppl_4.184

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