Early human embryo metabolism
- 1 April 1993
- Vol. 15 (4), 259-264
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.950150406
Abstract
Non‐invasive microanalytical methods have been devised to study the energy metabolism of single human preimplantation embryos. Psyruvate, which is added routinely to all media used to culture human embryos, is consumed throughout the preimplantation period, with glucose assuming an increasing role at embryo compaction and blastocyst formation. All of the glucose consumed may be accounted for by the appearance of lactate in the incubation medium. The enzyme hexokinase my be involved in regulating this aerobic glycolysis. There is cosiderable indirect evidence for the utilisation of endogenous as opposed to exogenous energy substrates, the most likely candidate being protein. Information on early human embryo metabolismis likely to find application in a number of areas: these include the improvement of techniques for assisted human conception, notably in the selection of embryos for transfer following In Vitro Fertilisation; the diagnosis of gentic defects at the preimplantation stage; increased undersding of the causes of implantation failure and miscarriage, and the development of novel post‐coital contraceptives.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Expectations of assisted conception for infertility.BMJ, 1992
- Developmentally related changes in the uptake and metabolism of glucose, glutamine and pyruvate by cattle embryos produced in vitroReproduction, Fertility and Development, 1992
- Carbon metabolism in early amphibian embryosTrends in Biochemical Sciences, 1991
- Current perspectives on placental development and its integration with fetal growthProceedings Of The Nutrition Society, 1991
- Transition from maternal to embryonic control in early mammalian development: A comparison of several speciesMolecular Reproduction and Development, 1990
- Contrast in Levels of Metabolic Enzymes in Human and Mouse Ova1Biology of Reproduction, 1988
- Improvement of in vitro fertilisation after treatment with buserelin, an agonist of luteinising hormone releasing hormoneBMJ, 1988
- Human gene expression first occurs between the four- and eight-cell stages of preimplantation developmentNature, 1988
- Energy Requirements of the Developing Mammalian Blastocyst for Active Ion TransportBiology of Reproduction, 1980
- Carbon dioxide production from lactate and pyruvate by the preimplantation mouse embryoExperimental Cell Research, 1967