Detail of 34_H2B-mCherry_CV-test_2nd_F019



Project
Title
Live-cell imaging of mouse embryos using the H2B-mCherry probe during mitosis.
Description
This is a pre-examination by live-cell imaging of mouse embryos using the H2B-mCherry probe during mitosis.
Release, Updated
2025-03-28
License
CC BY
Kind
Image data
File Formats
.tif
Data size
13.4 GB

Organism
Mus musculus ( NCBITaxon:10090 )
Strain(s)
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Cell Line
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Datatype
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Molecular Function (MF)
Biological Process (BP)
embryo development ( GO:0009790 ) mitotic cell cycle ( GO:0000278 )
Cellular Component (CC)
nucleus ( GO:0005634 )
Biological Imaging Method
time lapse microscopy ( Fbbi:00000249 )
confocal microscopy ( Fbbi:00000251 )
X scale
0.8 micrometer/pixel
Y scale
0.8 micrometer/pixel
Z scale
2.0 micrometer/slice
T scale
10 minutes

Image Acquisition
Experiment type
-
Microscope type
-
Acquisition mode
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Contrast method
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Microscope model
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Detector model
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Objective model
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Filter set
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Summary of Methods
See details in Mashiko D, et. al. Sci Rep. 2022 Jun 7;12(1):9411.
Related paper(s)

Daisuke Mashiko, Zenki Ikeda, Mikiko Tokoro, Yu Hatano, Tatsuma Yao, Tetsuya J Kobayashi, Noritaka Fukunaga, Yoshimasa Asada, Kazuo Yamagata (2022) Asynchronous division at 4-8-cell stage of preimplantation embryos affects live birth through ICM/TE differentiation., Scientific reports, Volume 12, Number 1, pp. 9411

Published in 2022 Jun 7 (Electronic publication in June 7, 2022, midnight )

(Abstract) To improve the performance of assisted reproductive technology, it is necessary to find an indicator that can identify and select embryos that will be born or be aborted. We searched for indicators of embryo selection by comparing born/abort mouse embryos. We found that asynchronous embryos during the 4-8-cell stage were predisposed to be aborted. In asynchronous mouse embryos, the nuclear translocation of YAP1 in some blastomeres and compaction were delayed, and the number of ICMs was reduced. Hence, it is possible that asynchronous embryos have abnormal differentiation. When the synchrony of human embryos was observed, it was confirmed that embryos that did not reach clinical pregnancy had asynchrony as in mice. This could make synchrony a universal indicator common to all animal species.
(MeSH Terms)

Contact
Kazuo Yamagata , Kindai University , Graduate School of Biology-Oriented Science and Technology
Contributors
Daisuke Mashiko, Zenki Ikeda, Mikiko Tokoro

OMERO Dataset
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OMERO Project
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Source