Oocyte generation in adult mammalian ovaries by putative germ cells in bone marrow and peripheral blood

Joshua Johnson, Jessamyn Bagley, Malgorzata Skaznik-Wikiel, Ho-Joon Lee, Gregor B Adams, Yuichi Niikura, Katherine S Tschudy, Jacqueline Canning Tilly, Maria L Cortes, Randolf Forkert, Thomas Spitzer, John Iacomini, David T Scadden, Jonathan L Tilly, Joshua Johnson, Jessamyn Bagley, Malgorzata Skaznik-Wikiel, Ho-Joon Lee, Gregor B Adams, Yuichi Niikura, Katherine S Tschudy, Jacqueline Canning Tilly, Maria L Cortes, Randolf Forkert, Thomas Spitzer, John Iacomini, David T Scadden, Jonathan L Tilly

Abstract

It has been suggested that germline stem cells maintain oogenesis in postnatal mouse ovaries. Here we show that adult mouse ovaries rapidly generate hundreds of oocytes, despite a small premeiotic germ cell pool. In considering the possibility of an extragonadal source of germ cells, we show expression of germline markers in bone marrow (BM). Further, BM transplantation restores oocyte production in wild-type mice sterilized by chemotherapy, as well as in ataxia telangiectasia-mutated gene-deficient mice, which are otherwise incapable of making oocytes. Donor-derived oocytes are also observed in female mice following peripheral blood transplantation. Although the fertilizability and developmental competency of the BM and peripheral blood-derived oocytes remain to be established, their morphology, enclosure within follicles, and expression of germ-cell- and oocyte-specific markers collectively support that these cells are bona fide oocytes. These results identify BM as a potential source of germ cells that could sustain oocyte production in adulthood.

Source: PubMed

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