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Ovarian Stem Cell Debate

July 9th, 2012 7:18 pm

Opinion is divided on a new paper showing that adult ovaries do not contain egg-making stem cells, contrary to the findings of two recent studies that themselves appeared to overturn longstanding dogma.

For more than half a century, textbooks have stated that women and other female mammals are born with all the eggs, or oocytes, they will ever have. This supply gradually shrinks with age, and ovaries are incapable of producing more of these reproductive cells.

This dogma has taken a pounding in recent years, however. Starting in 2004, Ji Wu of Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China and Jonathan Tilly of Massachusetts General Hospital isolated stem cells from the ovaries of mice, which could apparently divide to produce fresh oocytes. And earlier this year, Tilly announced that he has found cells with the same qualities, known as oogonial stem cells (OSCs), in the ovaries of middle-aged women.

These discoveries promised to offer new treatments for fertility, allowing women to have babies without worrying about an ageing supply of eggs. But as with all dogma-contradicting discoveries, they remained contentious.

Now, a new study from researchers at the University of Gothenburg is likely to fuel the controversy. Kui Liu and his colleagues used fluorescing proteins to identify the alleged egg-producing stem cells in the ovaries of mice, and found that the cells do not divide into oocytes. They published their results today (July 9) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The reaction to Lius study is strongly divided. Patricia Hunt, a reproductive biologist from Washington State University, described it as solid and informative. For those of us who have remained skeptical about the existence or role of stem cells in the ovary, this approach is a most welcome addition to the field, she said.

I took a close look at this and the work is fantastic, agreed David Albertini, a physiologist from the University of Kansas. It should put previous discussions into perspective. At least in mice, OSCs do not exist.

But Evelyn Telfer, a cell biologist from the University of Edinburgh, is less impressed, and said that Liu missed the opportunity to obtain robust experimental evidence. Because Liu used completely new methods, it is unclear how the cells he identified compare with those from previous studies. We are left with more questions than answers, said Telfer.

When Liu first saw the papers by Wu and Tilly, he was more excited than sceptical. My first impulse was: I want to repeat this, he said. But he was troubled by the fact that both Wu and Tillys teams fished for their cells using antibodies that recognize DDX4, a protein found in reproductive stem cells. But DDX4 is not a surface protein, Liu said, and is mainly found inside cells. The fishing technique should not have worked.

To avoid this problem, Lius members Hua Zhang and Wenjing Zheng worked with rainbow mice, whose reproductive cells glow green under normal conditions, but change to red, orange, or blue if they switch on the Ddx4 gene. Zhang and Zheng identified several such cells and watched them for 72 hours. They never once divided or produced oocytes. The duo did find some cells that looked like oocytes, but these did not express Ddx4.

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Ovarian Stem Cell Debate

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