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1 ortion of the cytoplasm underlying the first polar body.
2 sition of the contractile ring of the second polar body.
3 tivity that precedes extrusion of the second polar body.
4 tic cleavage or produces an abnormally large polar body.
5  chromosomes into a zygotic pronucleus and a polar body.
6 ment was biased toward the cortex and future polar body.
7 e microtubules that would direct them to the polar body.
8 e disposal of half of the chromosomes into a polar body.
9 n of chromosomes into a large egg and a tiny polar body.
10 ective disposal of half the chromosomes in a polar body.
11 nt to the maternal chromatin and the forming polar body.
12 nd abundant macroH2A is present in the first polar body.
13 favor of C57BL/6 alleles at Om in the second polar body.
14 ose to the animal pole, marked by the second polar body.
15 e was preferentially extruded with the first polar body.
16 o that extra chromosomes can be deposited in polar bodies.
17 thout transitioning to anaphase or producing polar bodies.
18 2 also remains associated with both extruded polar bodies.
19 ns, resulting in one large egg and two small polar bodies.
20 ized cap structure that is orientated toward polar bodies.
21 vents, producing one large egg and two small polar bodies.
22 ly removed from the oocyte by extrusion into polar bodies.
23  to facilitate extrusion of chromosomes into polar bodies.
24 is that results in a large egg and two small polar bodies.
25 ortex to allow expulsion of chromosomes into polar bodies.
26 al and generate a large oocyte and two small polar bodies.
27 cell stages lack macroH2A except in residual polar bodies.
28 sposal of three haploid chromosome sets into polar bodies.
29 olution of a sperm cell equivalent to female polar bodies.
30  GV-stage, and MII-arrested), pronuclei, and polar bodies.
31 eral endoderm cells that originated near the polar body (a marker of the blastocyst axis of symmetry)
32 t the contractile ring of the forming second polar body about 1.5 h post-activation.
33                                 At least one polar body, almost invariably the second, persists intac
34 nhk-1-/- mutant females arrest with aberrant polar bodies and mitotic spindles, revealing that mitosi
35 ads was found in the oocytes with analyzable polar bodies and no FISH errors.
36                     The whole genomes of the polar bodies and oocytes are amplified by multiple displ
37 wn of the germinal vesicle, the formation of polar bodies and the formation of the egg pronucleus.
38                         Membrane flow drives polar bodies and the ICSI site into the furrow.
39        That the distribution of degenerating polar bodies and their presumed debris was similar to in
40  Remarkably, surviving oocytes can extrude a polar body and be fertilised, despite chaotic chromosome
41 ndergo asymmetric cell division to produce a polar body and cleave to form two-cell embryos upon fert
42  observed beyond second cleavage, the second polar body and conceptus could remain coupled ionically
43 eiotic spindle and are inherited by both the polar body and embryo.
44 1) distribution of chromatids into the first polar body and M-II oocytes.
45 on of meiosis and the emission of the second polar body and precedes the decline in MAP kinase activi
46 idual samples comprising 254 blastomeres, 42 polar bodies, and 175 cellular fragments from a large nu
47 sting into the MII stage oocyte, the oocytic polar bodies, and the two-cell embryo, extinction becomi
48 leted the first meiotic division extruding a polar body, and became competent for fertilization by sp
49 intracellular calcium, extrusion of a second polar body, and progression to meiotic stages beyond MII
50 sition with reference to the egg surface and polar bodies are given off at this new site.
51                                              Polar bodies are not extruded, but remain in the embryo
52                                 As a result, polar bodies are not produced, pronuclei fail to form, a
53 red, a chitin eggshell is not formed, and no polar bodies are produced.
54 e time course for the emission of the second polar body are significantly delayed/inhibited.
55 cell division in the ovary, exhibit abnormal polar bodies, are detached from the cumulus granulosa ce
56 ding moiety in the jelly coat near the first polar body as it is being given off and also a discrete
57 tion and programmed degradation of the first polar body as new and important roles for the Mos/MAPK p
58 l amount of material either from the animal (polar body-associated) or the vegetal (opposite) pole of
59 somes are expelled into small, nondeveloping polar bodies at anaphase.
60 re spindle with all the chromosomes into the polar bodies at metaphase II, a mechanism we previously
61 cells located either near to or opposite the polar body at the 8-cell stage of the mouse embryo retai
62  therefore be related to the position of the polar body at the 8-cell stage, and by implication, to t
63 due to unequal segregation of alleles to the polar body at the second meiotic division.
64 ntry and aster disassembly also required for polar body biogenesis.
65                                              Polar body biopsy was performed on metaphase II (MII) oo
66 pulsion of the entire meiotic spindle into a polar body by negatively regulating the rho pathway rath
67 myosin II isotypes concentrate in the second polar body cleavage furrow and the sperm incorporation c
68      The chromosomes in the oocyte and first polar body complement each other and provide an internal
69 ond meiotic spindle in relation to the first polar body; consequently, microinjection targeting is im
70                           Considering that a polar body contains few mitochondria and shares the same
71 erhaps dynein-driven, is causally related to polar body contractile ring formation, with anaphase ent
72 ed that spatial organization of the putative polar body contractile ring was determined by the periph
73 s were frequently captured by the ingressing polar body contractile ring.
74            Unlike mitotic contractile rings, polar body contractile rings assemble over one spindle p
75 tric cytokinetic events that extrude the two polar bodies during oocyte meiosis, but is dispensable f
76 ndle to detach from the cortex and prevented polar body emission after activation.
77  that Ca(2+) influx is sufficient to support polar body emission and pronucleus formation after only
78 rations had no effect on spindle function or polar body emission.
79  of CaMKIIgamma that are required for second polar body emission.
80 n the egg and in defining the future site of polar body emission.
81  as part of the contractile apparatus during polar body emission.
82 ellular calcium levels interferes with first-polar-body emission in mice and frogs.
83 tion, but the exact role of Ca(2+) in second-polar-body emission remains unknown.
84 e subsequent irreversible progression to the polar body extruded stage.
85 Cdk1-cyclin B1 activity falls at the time of polar body extrusion and after MAP kinase has been inhib
86 sitioning of the meiotic spindle, defects in polar body extrusion and chromosome segregation, and abn
87 se chromosomes with the subsequent events of polar body extrusion and cytokinesis.
88 nt protein Msp1 partly rescued the decreased polar body extrusion and reduced the accumulation of sec
89 th a Trk receptor inhibitor suppressed first polar body extrusion and the progression of zygotes into
90 y, chromosome alignment and segregation, and polar body extrusion during meiosis I.
91                                              Polar body extrusion during oocyte maturation is critica
92                    In the absence of ALADIN, polar body extrusion is compromised due to problems in s
93 homologous chromosomes do not segregate, and polar body extrusion is prevented.
94                                              Polar body extrusion occurred at the ring center, the di
95 est in meiosis-1; despite cell cycle arrest, polar body extrusion occurred roughly on schedule.
96 ssed exclusively in oocytes to enhance first polar body extrusion of oocytes and to promote the in vi
97                                           As polar body extrusion progressed, P-Tyr-containing protei
98 M10, disrupts Septin-complex assembly at the polar body extrusion site in MII oocytes.
99 nced and the advance to anaphase I and first polar body extrusion takes place without delay.
100                                     GVBD and polar body extrusion were reduced significantly (P < 0.0
101 ation defects during anaphase II, precluding polar body extrusion.
102 reticulum and Lamin, and disappear following polar body extrusion.
103 t before completing MI, marked by failure of polar body extrusion.
104 ndle but still permits spindle migration and polar body extrusion.
105 tor that permitted ring assembly but blocked polar body extrusion.
106         This was independent of actual first polar body extrusion.
107  from starfish oocytes by extrusion into the polar bodies for successful embryo development.
108 n eggs can be fertilized only at the site of polar body formation and first acquire this ability duri
109                                              Polar body formation is an essential step in forming hap
110 While the role of the actin cap in promoting polar body formation is established, ring myosin II acti
111 ite where the meiotic apparatus attaches and polar body formation occurs following fertilization.
112                             This new site of polar body formation sets up a new animal-vegetal axis t
113  breakdown, disappeared at the time of first polar body formation, and then reappeared as larger clus
114 antibody, alone or coinjected, blocks second polar body formation, in vitro fertilization, or cytokin
115 -4 and EGG-5, we observe defects in meiosis, polar body formation, the block to polyspermy, F-actin d
116 ine the precise role of calcium signaling in polar body formation, we used live-cell imaging coupled
117 and first acquire this ability during second polar body formation.
118 d with local events occurring at the site of polar body formation.
119 f sperm-derived pronuclear expansion and (2) polar body formation.
120 culin-B permitted all events except ring and polar body formation.
121 in the ring center, respectively, inhibiting polar body formation.
122 ciated with the egg surface where the second polar body forms, which disappears immediately after fer
123 mozygosity, an observation inconsistent with polar body fusion as the underlying mechanism of restora
124     This has led to the proposal that second polar body fusion following the meiotic divisions restor
125 ous telomere lengths, that human oocytes and polar bodies have nearly identical telomere lengths, and
126 ng the phagocytic clearance of non-apoptotic polar bodies in C. elegans, we previously discovered tha
127 ed meiotic maturation and extruded the first polar bodies in culture; however, their meiotic spindles
128 the oocyte cortex ensures extrusion of small polar bodies in the two meiotic divisions, essential for
129 that fusions preferentially segregate to the polar body in laboratory mouse strains when the fusion c
130 time that the contractile ring of the second polar body is constricting.
131 lin B1 kinase activity declines and a second polar body is emitted.
132 ethal aneuploidy: if, when taken towards the polar body, it instead kills the embryo via aneuploidy,
133  We propose that if R2d2 is destined for the polar body, it manipulates segregation to sabotage the e
134 ed by female meiosis associate together in a polar body-like structure, while a bipolar spindle is es
135 o the germinal vesicle is the site where the polar bodies normally form.
136              It is concluded that the second polar body normally remains attached to the conceptus th
137                                          The polar body nuclei do not associate with their normal mon
138 mbryos completed anaphase I but did not form polar bodies or assemble meiosis II spindles.
139    Prior to emission of the first and second polar bodies, PAR-3 is located within a central subdomai
140 down during oocyte maturation did not affect polar body (PB) extrusion.
141                                    The first polar body (PB) is extruded from the oocyte before ferti
142 f human female meiosis: the first and second polar bodies (PB1 and PB2) and the corresponding oocyte.
143 equencing the triads of the first and second polar bodies (PB1 and PB2) and the oocyte pronuclei from
144 icant pro-M I/M Iarrest and failure of first polar body (PB1) extrusion.
145 g to metaphase I arrest and failure of first polar body (PB1) extrusion.
146  oocytes following nuclear transfer of first polar body (PB1) genomes from metaphase II (MII) oocytes
147                                    The first polar body (pb1) is extruded when the MPF activity is lo
148 (GVBD) and failure in extrusion of the first polar body (PBE).
149                          Moreover, the first polar body persists instead of degrading and sometimes u
150 ing experiments failed to detect movement of polar bodies relative to the surface of the conceptus du
151 an oocytes that give rise to mature eggs and polar bodies remains poorly understood.
152 aternal chromosomes could be expelled into a polar body resulting in lethal monosomy.
153 he fertilized eggs failed to emit the second polar body, resulting in formation of three pronuclei.
154 xpected phenotype of initial ingression of a polar body ring with twice the diameter of wild type.
155 pindle poles in anaphase, thereby minimizing polar body size.
156 pe revealed a novel mechanism for minimizing polar body size.
157  of F-actin was observed during formation of polar bodies, suggesting the existence of a secondary me
158 ed, while those that originated opposite the polar body tended to become proximal.
159 bditis elegans led to the formation of large polar bodies that contain all maternal DNA, because the
160      Hence, according to the distribution of polar bodies, the axis of bilateral symmetry of the earl
161 -wide SNP genotyping and meiomapping of both polar bodies to identify maternal meiotic errors and kar
162 symmetric, producing a large egg and a small polar body to preserve maternal storage essential for em
163 rodite oogenesis they segregate to the first polar body to yield nullo-X oocytes.
164           Our preclinical model demonstrates polar body transfer has great potential to prevent inher
165 nalysis confirms that the F1 generation from polar body transfer possesses minimal donor mtDNA carryo
166 me genomic material as an oocyte, we perform polar body transfer to prevent the transmission of mtDNA
167 r, pronuclear transfer, and first and second polar body transfer, in mice.
168  genotype remains stable in F2 progeny after polar body transfer.
169 nal spindle transfer, pronuclear transfer or polar body transfer: all involve the transfer of nuclear
170 tion in early blastocysts of these surviving polar bodies was highly non-random.
171                            The corresponding polar bodies were also analyzed in 188 of these oocytes.
172 as did the finding that at all stages second polar bodies were attached to conceptuses by a thin, ext
173 d induce cyclin B1 destruction and the first polar body would be extruded.

 
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