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    What's this?
First artificial ovary matures human eggs
For women facing cancer treatment, immature eggs could be frozen and then matured in the artificial ovary.

By

LiveScience
Tue, Sep 28 2010 at 2:59 PM

Related Topics:

Research & Innovation, Science
artificial ovary

SUCCESS: The artificial human ovary surrounds and supports fluorescent human granulosa cell spheres (GC), which are one of the three types of ovary cells, after several days in culture. (Photo: The Carson Lab)

A lab-grown ovary has successfully matured human eggs and could eventually be used to help women conceive.
 
The artificial ovary could play a role in preserving the fertility of women facing cancer treatment in the future, said study researcher Sandra Carson, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University and director of the division of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Women & Infants Hospital in Providence, R.I.
 
Immature eggs could be salvaged and frozen before the onset of chemotherapy or radiation, and then matured in the artificial ovary.
 
"I think this will be a way that we'll be able to mature eggs, but it's not going to be next month," Carson told LiveScience, adding that she hopes in the next five years the method will be used in clinical practice.
 
The development will also provide a living laboratory of sorts for looking into basic questions about how healthy ovaries work and how exposure to toxins, such as phthalates, can disrupt the organ and its function.
 
Ovaries are almond-size organs (most women have two) in which eggs mature before being released down the fallopian tubes, ready to be fertilized. But when aiming to recreate one, the scientists had to look under the hood at key details.
 
"An ovary is composed of three main cell types, and this is the first time that anyone has created a 3-D tissue structure with triple cell line," Carson said.
 
She said her goal was never to invent an artificial organ, per se, but merely to create a research environment where she could study how the three types of ovary cells interact.
 
But then Carson learned about special Petri dishes created in the lab of Jeffrey Morgan, associate professor of medical science and engineering at Brown University. The dishes are made out of a moldable gel meant to coax cells into certain shapes. The cells can't attach to the micro-mold and so instead they attach to one another within the confines of the custom-shaped molds.
 
"In a typical Petri dish, cells grow as one layer on the surface of the dish," Morgan said in a telephone interview. "And in our 3-D dish the cells grow as clusters of cells, they self-assemble to form a 3-D structure."
 
The two researchers collaborated to create the lab ovary. First they formed honeycombs of theca cells, one of two key types in the ovary, donated by patients ages 25 to 46 at the hospital. After the theca cells grew into the honeycomb shape, spherical clumps of donated granulosa cells were inserted into the holes of the honeycomb together with human egg cells (oocytes), also donated by patients. In a couple days the theca cells enveloped the granulosa and eggs, mimicking a real ovary. [Image of honeycomb ovary]
 
In experiments the structure, which is about the diameter of a pencil eraser, was able to nurture eggs from the so-called early antral follicle stage to full maturity. None of the eggs in the study were fertilized with sperm.
 
The scientists detail their results online Aug. 25 in the Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics that describes the innovation.
 
The research was supported by the division of reproductive endocrinology & infertility at the Women & Infants' Hospital of Rhode Island, and by a grant from the Rhode Island Science and Technology Council.
 
This article was reprinted with permission from LiveScience.
 
Related on LiveScience.com:
  • 5 Myths About Women's Bodies
  • 5 Myths About Fertility Treatments
  • Top 10 Mysterious Diseases

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anonymous
Rajan Garg Sep 29 2010 at 4:16 AM

By using the cells of healthy women of childbearing age, the synthetic ovary was developed in the lab. Then human eggs cells were placed into it to verify whether it was competent of helping them to grow until they were ready to be released into the womb.

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