Propagation of an infertile hermaphrodite
mouse lacking germ cells by using nuclear transfer and embryonic stem
cell technology
Wakayama S, Kishigami S, Van Thuan N, Ohta H, Hikichi T, Mizutani E, Yanagimachi
R and Wakayama T
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 102(1):29-33 (2005)
SUMMARY
Animals generated by systematic mutagenesis and routine breeding are often
infertile because they lack germ cells, and maintenance of such lines
of animals has been impossible. We found a hermaphrodite infertile mouse
in our colony, a genetic male with an abnormal Y chromosome lacking developing
germ cells. We tried to clone this mouse by conventional nuclear transfer
but without success. ES cells produced from blastocysts, which had been
cloned by using somatic cell nuclear transfer (ntES cells) from this mouse,
were also unable to produce offspring when injected into enucleated oocytes.
Although we were able to produce two chimeric offspring using these ntES
cells by tetraploid complementation, they were infertile, because they
also lacked developing germ cells. However, when such ntES cells were
injected into normal diploid blastocysts, many chimeric offspring were
produced. One such male offspring transmitted hermaphrodite mouse genes
to fertile daughters via X chromosome-bearing sperm. Thus, ntES cells
were used to propagate offspring from infertile mice lacking germ cells.
LINK
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