Comparative embryology and mammalian cloning

Autor: L. M. Chailakhyan, N. Yu. Sakharova
Rok vydání: 2010
Předmět:
Zdroj: Biophysics. 55:394-398
ISSN: 1555-6654
0006-3509
DOI: 10.1134/s0006350910030073
Popis: A hypothesis has been advanced that logically combines “contradictory” facts concerning the early mammalian development and shows a natural relationship between the embryos developing from a fertilized ovum and from cells of the inner cell mass of blastocyst. When studying the theoretical questions of cloning, it is necessary to take into consideration the peculiarities of prenatal mammalian ontogeny, which make themselves evident upon comparison with other animals. The absence of yolk in the mammalian ovum defines sharp differences in the early development between mammals and other Amniota. The complete asynchronous cleavage results in the formation of morula followed by blastocyst, which hatches from zona pellucida and is implanted into the uterus tissue. This fact allows us to consider the blastocyst as a mammalian larva, which is fed owing to the maternal organism. It is known that, in the body of a larva (blastocyst), a new embryo develops from some somatic cells. This process is known as polyembryony, which is typical of the development of some parasitic insects. Polyembryony in turn is a variant of somatic embryogenesis, which is a form of asexual reproduction. Thus, the two different embryos, “conceptus” and “embryo proper,” have different origins: the first forms by the sexual way and the second, by the asexual way. Investigation of the mechanisms of somatic embryogenesis in mammals will help us to find conditions necessary for full reprogramming of donor somatic nuclei and provide for successful development of reconstructed embryos.
Databáze: OpenAIRE