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Mechanisms of sperm-egg interactions emerging from gene-manipulated animals
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Mechanisms of sperm-egg interactions emerging from gene-manipulated animals

M. Okabe and J.M. Cummins
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences, Vol.64(15), pp.1945-1958
2007

Abstract

Untangling the molecular nature of sperm-egg interactions is fundamental if we are to understand fertilization. These phenomena have been studied for many years using biochemical approaches such as antibodies and ligands that interact with sperm or with eggs and their vestments. However, when homologous genetic recombination techniques were applied, most of the phenotypic factors of the gene-manipulated animals believed "essential" for fertilization were found to be dispensable. Of course, all biological systems contain redundancies and compensatory mechanisms, but as a whole the old model of fertilization clearly requires significant modification. In this review, we use the results of gene manipulation experiments in animals to propose the basis for a new vision

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Collaboration types
International collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.81 Reproductive Biology
1.81.176 Male Fertility
Web Of Science research areas
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Cell Biology
ESI research areas
Molecular Biology & Genetics
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