2015 Group Project 1: Difference between revisions

From Embryology
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===Hereditary Mitochondrial Disorders===
===Hereditary Mitochondrial Disorders===
 
Mitochondrial disorders cover a broad range of clinical symptoms and affected organs. Predominantly they present as neurologic and myopathic diseases owing to the retardation of ATP production but symptoms can include deafness, vision loss, diabetes and organ failure among others. The following is an inexhaustive list of the most notable disorders.
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! Mutation
! Mutation
! Preventable with mitochondrial donation
! Preventable with mitochondrial donation
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| Alpers disease<ref><pubmed>20220442</pubmed></ref>
| Degenerative disease of CNS
| Psychomotor retardation, epilepsy, liver failure, cortical necrosis
| nDNA gene mutation
| style="background-color: salmon;"|"No"
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| Kearns-Sayre Sydrome (KSS)<ref><pubmed>25539952</pubmed></ref>
| Kearns-Sayre Sydrome (KSS)<ref><pubmed>25539952</pubmed></ref>
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| mtDNA and nDNA mutations
| mtDNA and nDNA mutations
| style="background-color: LightBlue;"|"Most Cases"
| style="background-color: LightBlue;"|"Most Cases"
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Revision as of 01:47, 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 controversy in the media and scientific community 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

Mitochondrial donation as a therapy began in the 1980s with rudimentary cytoplasmic transfer. Due to the new nature of genetic manipulation and welfare concerns for the children born from this technology, it was quickly prohibited from clinical use. Research into new techniques continued through the 1990s and 2000s. As of 2015 human mitochondrial donation via spindle transfer is approved for limited use in the United Kingdom and due to be approved in the United States by 2016.