2015 Group Project 1: Difference between revisions

From Embryology
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* '''1982, United Kingdom'''  - Audrey Muggleton-Harris's group at MRC Laboratory Animals Center in Surrey, developed the technique and reported the first successful mammalian cytoplasmic transfer in mice <ref name=pmid6896904/>.
* '''1982, United Kingdom'''  - Audrey Muggleton-Harris's group at MRC Laboratory Animals Center in Surrey, developed the technique and reported the first successful mammalian cytoplasmic transfer in mice <ref name=pmid6896904/>.
* '''1982 United Kingdon''' -  Muggleton-Harris's group transferred cytoplasm from mice strains whose oocytes divide past the two-cell stage in vitro into mice to overcome the two-cell barrier <ref name=pmid6896904/>.
* '''1982 United Kingdon''' -  Muggleton-Harris's group transferred cytoplasm from mice strains whose oocytes divide past the two-cell stage in vitro into mice to overcome the two-cell barrier <ref name=pmid6896904/>.
* '''1997, United States''' - Jacques Cohen, Richard Scott, Tim Schimmel, Jacob Levron, and Steen Willadsen at the Institute for Reproductive Medicine and Science of St. Barnabas in West Orange, New Jersey, announced the birth of a baby girl after the first successful human cytoplasmic transfer <ref><pubmed> 9250192</pubmed></ref>.
* '''1997, United States''' - Jacques Cohen, Richard Scott, Tim Schimmel, Jacob Levron, and Steen Willadsen at the Institute for Reproductive Medicine and Science of St. Barnabas in West Orange, New Jersey, announced the birth of a baby girl after the first successful human cytoplasmic transfer <ref name=pmid9250192/>.
* '''1998 United States''' – The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) banned the procedure.
* '''1998 United States''' – The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) banned the procedure.
* '''2002 United States''' - one of the children conceived through ooplasmic transfer were diagnosed with pervasive developmental disorder, and indicated mild developmental delays to severe autism.
* '''2002 United States''' - one of the children conceived through ooplasmic transfer were diagnosed with pervasive developmental disorder, and indicated mild developmental delays to severe autism.
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| Synchronized fresh oocytes by injection (USA) <ref><pubmed> 9250192 </pubmed></ref> <ref><pubmed> 9570273 </pubmed></ref>  <ref><pubmed> 10973657 </pubmed></ref> <ref><pubmed>11228222 </pubmed></ref> <ref><pubmed>11041526</pubmed></ref>
| Synchronized fresh oocytes by injection (USA) <ref name=pmid9250192/> <ref><pubmed> 9570273 </pubmed></ref>  <ref><pubmed> 10973657 </pubmed></ref> <ref><pubmed>11228222 </pubmed></ref> <ref><pubmed>11041526</pubmed></ref>
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Revision as of 17:50, 23 October 2015

2015 Student Projects 
2015 Projects: Three Person Embryos | Ovarian Hyper-stimulation Syndrome | Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome | Male Infertility | Oncofertility | Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis | Students
2015 Group Project Topic - Assisted Reproductive Technology
This page is an undergraduate science embryology student and may contain inaccuracies in either description or acknowledgements.

Three Person Embryos

Three Person Embryos are embryos from oocytes that contain maternal and paternal DNA, and mitochondria from a third donor. Collectively, the techniques for the creation of Three Person Embryos are referred to as Mitochondrial Donation or Mitochondrial replacement-assisted IVF. Mitochondrial donation is used for the prevention of maternal inheritance of Mitochondrial disorders that occur due to the mutation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). It is considered a germ-line therapy, with the donated mitochondria being passed maternally to the next generation. Because of this it has generated debate in the media and scientific community over the ethics of its use, since the first techniques were developed in the 1980s. Recently, with the development of safer techniques, the United Kingdom and United States have begun the process of legalizing its clinical use.


<html5media width="560" height="315">https://www.youtube.com/embed/0Zs2KntZ7vU</html5media>

Teenage Girl Has Three Biological Parents [1]

History