bioon.com 生物谷
生物谷RSS 生物谷手机WAP浏览支持
专业平台生物 | 产业 | 药学 | 医学 | 视频 | 实验 | 健康 | 图谱 | 考试 | 招聘 | 社区 | VIP | English
企业服务产品平台 | 仪器大全 | 供求信息 | 试剂大全 | 会议会展 | 黄页 广告 | 服务 | 生意通 | E-solution
个人服务彩信 | 继续教育 | 博客 | 书库 | 求职 | 网址导航 | 下载 | 论坛 | 投稿 | TILS
您现在的位置: 生物谷 >> 生物 >> 最新快讯 >> 生物频道正文
rss

Research Reveals A Cellular Basis For A Male Biolo

Researchers at the University of Washington have discovered a cellular basis for what many have long suspected: Men, as well as women, have a reproductive clock that ticks down with age. A recent study revealed that sperm in men older than 35 showed more DNA damage than that of men in the younger age group. In addition, the older men's bodies appeared less efficient at eliminating the damaged cells, which could pass along problems to offspring. "When you talk about having children, there has been a lot of focus on maternal age," said Narendra Singh, research assistant professor in the UW Department of Bioengineering and lead researcher on the study. "I think our study shows that paternal age is also relevant." Charles Muller, with the UW Department of Urology and a collaborator on the study, recently presented the findings at the annual meeting of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine in Seattle. In the study, researchers recruited 60 men, age 22 to 60, from laboratory and clinical groups. A computerized semen analysis was performed for each of the subjects, looking for breaks in sperm cell DNA and evidence of apoptosis, or cell suicide. Normally, when something goes irreparably wrong in a cell, that cell is programmed to kill itself as a means of protecting the body. The researchers found that men over age 35 had sperm with lower motility and more highly damaged DNA in the form of DNA double-strand breaks. The older group also had fewer apoptotic cells ?an important discovery, Singh said. "A really key factor that differentiates sperm from other cells in the body is that they do not repair their DNA damage," he said. "Most other cells do." As a result, the only way to avoid passing sperm DNA damage to a child is for the damaged cells to undergo apoptosis, a process that the study indicates declines with age. "So in older men, the sperm are accumulating more damage, and those severely damaged sperm are not being eliminated," Singh said. "That means some of that damage could be transmitted to the baby." More research is needed to determine just what the risks are. Other reseachers in the study included Richard E. Berger, UW professor of urology. The work was supported by the Paul G. Allen Foundation for Medical Research.
生物频道录入:admin    责任编辑:admin 


评论】【收藏】【告诉好友】【打印】 【返回顶部】 【直达首页】 【网站地图】 【进入论坛】 

文章评论(评论内容只代表网友观点,与生物谷立场无关!

推荐信息
推荐产品
最新资讯
热点聚焦
推荐文章
 
 
关于我们 | 广告服务 | 联系方式 | 帮助信息 | 服务条款 | 法律声明 | 战略伙伴 | 友情链接 | 生意通 | 网站地图 | Bioon English
Copyright © 2001-2007 生物谷 bioon.com , All Rights Reserved. 版权所有
不良信息举报信箱:editor#bioon.com
网站备案:沪ICP备05022939号