First Sperm Grown Outside The Body Raises Fertility Hope
If the technique proves transferable to humans, the discovery could help scientists identify solutions to male infertility, and provide options to young cancer patients whose treatment causes future infertility, experts say.
By gaining a better understanding of the molecular steps behind sperm formation, scientists could tap into important clues to make in-vitro fertilization possible for men.
For young boys who undergo cancer therapies that cause infertility, the ability to create sperm from human cells would be crucial. There is growing concern that treatments like radiation and chemotherapy could rob young cancer patients of the ability to have children in the future. While young adults have options -- banking sperm or freezing embryos or eggs -- at the moment children diagnosed before puberty don't.
So how does it work?
Research leader Takehiko Ogawa and his team cultivated small pieces of tissue from mice testes and bathed the tissues in a mixture with a serum often used to grow embryonic stem cells. (It was in changing the ingredients of this mixture that researchers succeeded this time where they had failed in the past.) The team tried various culture methods and tested which allowed the mouse sperm to mature, using a fluorescent protein to track the sperm's growth.
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