Expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequences

Abstract Background Due to rapid research progress in reproductive biology and reproductive clinical endocrinology, many human infertility treatments are close to potential breakthroughs and translational applications. We here review current barriers, where such breakthroughs will likely come from,...

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Main Author: Norbert Gleicher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-06-01
Series:Journal of Translational Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12967-018-1525-4
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spelling doaj-77987d183f8e46c3811836e388ed26b12020-11-25T02:12:18ZengBMCJournal of Translational Medicine1479-58762018-06-0116111310.1186/s12967-018-1525-4Expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequencesNorbert Gleicher0The CHRAbstract Background Due to rapid research progress in reproductive biology and reproductive clinical endocrinology, many human infertility treatments are close to potential breakthroughs and translational applications. We here review current barriers, where such breakthroughs will likely come from, what they will entail, and their potential clinical applications. Main text The radical nature of change will primarily benefit older women, reduce fertility treatment costs and thereby expand access to treatment. A still widely overlooked prerequisite for implantation and normal pregnancy maintenance is timely development of maternal immunological tolerance toward an implanting paternal semi-allograft, if malfunctioning associated with implantation failure and pregnancy loss, while premature termination of tolerance appears associated with premature labor, pre-eclampsia/eclampsia and gestoses of pregnancy. Common denominators between pregnancy and invasive malignancies have again been attracting attention, suggesting that, like in malignant tumors, degrees of embryo aneuploidy may affect invasiveness and ability to “disarm” the immune system’s innate response against implanting embryos. Linking tolerance to implantation, we offer evidence that the so-called “implantation window” is likely immunological rather than hormonally defined. Conclusions Because many here outlined treatment changes will disproportionally benefit older women, they will exert a pronounced effect on society, as increasing numbers of women at grandparental ages will become mothers.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12967-018-1525-4InfertilityGametesZygotesEmbryosCell lineage determinationMosaicism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Norbert Gleicher
spellingShingle Norbert Gleicher
Expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequences
Journal of Translational Medicine
Infertility
Gametes
Zygotes
Embryos
Cell lineage determination
Mosaicism
author_facet Norbert Gleicher
author_sort Norbert Gleicher
title Expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequences
title_short Expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequences
title_full Expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequences
title_fullStr Expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequences
title_full_unstemmed Expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequences
title_sort expected advances in human fertility treatments and their likely translational consequences
publisher BMC
series Journal of Translational Medicine
issn 1479-5876
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Abstract Background Due to rapid research progress in reproductive biology and reproductive clinical endocrinology, many human infertility treatments are close to potential breakthroughs and translational applications. We here review current barriers, where such breakthroughs will likely come from, what they will entail, and their potential clinical applications. Main text The radical nature of change will primarily benefit older women, reduce fertility treatment costs and thereby expand access to treatment. A still widely overlooked prerequisite for implantation and normal pregnancy maintenance is timely development of maternal immunological tolerance toward an implanting paternal semi-allograft, if malfunctioning associated with implantation failure and pregnancy loss, while premature termination of tolerance appears associated with premature labor, pre-eclampsia/eclampsia and gestoses of pregnancy. Common denominators between pregnancy and invasive malignancies have again been attracting attention, suggesting that, like in malignant tumors, degrees of embryo aneuploidy may affect invasiveness and ability to “disarm” the immune system’s innate response against implanting embryos. Linking tolerance to implantation, we offer evidence that the so-called “implantation window” is likely immunological rather than hormonally defined. Conclusions Because many here outlined treatment changes will disproportionally benefit older women, they will exert a pronounced effect on society, as increasing numbers of women at grandparental ages will become mothers.
topic Infertility
Gametes
Zygotes
Embryos
Cell lineage determination
Mosaicism
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12967-018-1525-4
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