The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Laboratory advance provides view of early embryo developmen­t

- ByMalcolmR­itter

NEWYORK >> New lab techniques have provided the first good look at a crucial but mysterious stage in the developmen­t of human embryos, scientists reported Wednesday.

The researcher­s said follow-up research might eventually lead to new treatments for infertilit­y and perhaps new forms of birth control.

The work extends the amount of embryonic developmen­t that can be observed in a laboratory.

In the first week after fertilizat­ion, an egg grows into a hollow ball of cells, and scientists have long been able to watch that happen. But then this early embryo — about the size of a grain of salt — attaches itself to a woman’s uterus and undergoes radical change, and that stage has been a “complete black box,” said Ali Brivanlou of Rockefelle­r University in New York.

He’s a member of one of two scientific teams that reported on Monday that they were able to extend embryonic develop- This microscope photo provided by The Rockefelle­r University shows a human embryo 12 days after fertilizat­ion in vitro, with different cell types marked by separate colors. ment into a second week in a lab dish. Neither team simulated implantati­on, because the embryos attached themselves to the plastic of lab dishes rather than to uterine tissue.

But even without any direction from a mother, the embryos proceeded with critical steps toward making a body. They flattened into disks, which then assumed a volcanolik­e shape. They produced primitive internal structures and specialize­d cells. Brivanlou’s team spotted an unexpected type of cell that he said had not been detected in any other mammal species. Researcher­s have “no clue” what it does, he said.

“We can now ask how the fundamenta­l structures of the embryo are formed after implantati­on,” said Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz of Cambridge University in England, who led the second team.

Both groups worked independen­tly to modify a lab technique ZernickaGo­etz’s lab had developed for working with mouse embryos. Brivanlou and colleagues reported results in the journal Nature, while Zernicka- Goetz’s team reported in Nature Cell Biology. Both teams used embryos donated by couples who’d used fertility clinics.

Brivanlou’s team terminated its research at the embryonic stage corre- sponding to 14 days after fertilizat­ion, and ZernickaGo­etz’s experiment­s were stopped on days 12 or 13. That’s because of the “14day rule,” an internatio­nal ethical standard that limits laboratory studies of human embryos.

Experts not involved in the research were impressed by the results.

The “beautiful work” provides new ways to look at how early embryos develop, said reproducti­ve biologist Bruce Murphy, a University of Montreal researcher who is president of the Society for the Study of Reproducti­on.

“You’re seeing the way cells begin to organize in the very early stages of producing a new baby, and that is fascinatin­g for anybody,” said John Aplin of the University of Manchester in England.

“It gives us all kinds of new ideas to work on,” said D. Randall Armant of Wayne State University in Detroit. Online: Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature

Nature Cell Biology: http://www.nature.com/ ncb

 ?? GIST CROFT, ALESSIA DEGLINCERT­I, ALI H. BRIVANLOU — THE ROCKEFELLE­R UNIVERSITY VIA AP ??
GIST CROFT, ALESSIA DEGLINCERT­I, ALI H. BRIVANLOU — THE ROCKEFELLE­R UNIVERSITY VIA AP

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