The migration speed of nucleolar precursor bodies in pronuclei affects in vitro fertilization‐derived human embryo ploidy status and live birth

Author:

Inoue Taketo12ORCID,Taguchi Sayumi1,Uemura Mikiko3ORCID,Tsujimoto Yoshiko1,Kokunai Kana1,Ikawa Kayoe1,Yamashita Yoshiki1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Umeda Fertility Clinic Osaka Japan

2. Department of Emergency, Disaster and Critical Care Medicine Hyogo Medical University Nishinomiya Japan

3. Department of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Health Science Kansai University of Welfare Sciences Osaka Japan

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTo study the relationship between clinical outcomes after assisted reproduction and the migration speed of nucleolus precursor bodies (NPBs) in male and female pronuclei (mPN; fPN).MethodsNPB migration speed, embryo ploidy status, and live birth (LB) were retrospectively analyzed in IVF‐derived zygotes. The central coordinates of the mPN, fPN, and NPBs were noted at multiple timepoints. The migration distance of NPBs between two sequential images was measured to calculate NPB migration speed.ResultsThe NPB migration speeds in mPN and fPN were significantly faster in euploid zygotes than in aneuploid zygotes. In multivariate logistic analysis, NPB migration speed in mPN and the female age were associated with euploidy. The NPB migration speeds in mPN and fPN were also significantly faster in zygotes that led to LB than in zygotes that led to no pregnancy. In a receiver operating characteristic curve analysis of LB by NPB migration speed in mPN, the cut‐off value was 3.74 μm/h (AUC: 0.825, 95%CI: 0.688–0.963). When the zygotes were categorized by this cut‐off value, there were significantly more LBs in zygotes with migration speed ≥ the cut‐off (78.9% vs. 21.1%).ConclusionsZygotes with quickly migrating NPBs demonstrated the developmental potential to become a baby.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Reproductive Medicine

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