下一个

自动播放

Fertility treatment, not maternal age, causes epigenetic changes in mouse offspring

2 意见 • 07/09/23
分享
嵌入
administrator
administrator
订户
0

After fertilization, cells within a newly-formed mouse embryo divide and multiply. The cells all have the same DNA, but gene expression patterns diverge as they start to take on different roles. Once there are a few dozen cells, a fluid-filled cavity appears in the center of the embryo. Cells on the surface will become the placenta and the clump of cells nestled to one side will become the fetus. With epigenetic disorders, the gene expression instructions aren't passed down or maintained properly. In Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome, for example, the loss of epigenetic marks causes an overgrowth of the placenta and certain parts of the fetus.
Credit: Audrey Kindsfather / University of Pittsburgh

显示更多
0 注释 sort 排序方式
脸书评论

下一个

自动播放