Application of amphiregulin in IVM culture of immature human oocytes and pre-insemination culture for COCs in IVF cycles
Yongqi Fan, Jing Wang, Tingting Ye, Dandan Yang, Qiqi Zhang, Chao Zhang, Bo Yan, Qiushuang Wang, Ding Ding, Beili Chen, Weiwei Zou, Dongmei Ji, Huijuan Zou, Zhiguo Zhang

TL;DR
This study shows that adding amphiregulin to culture media improves the maturation and development of human oocytes during in vitro fertilization.
Contribution
The study pioneers the use of amphiregulin in pre-insemination culture of COCs and identifies its optimal concentration for improving IVF outcomes.
Findings
AR levels in follicular fluid positively correlate with blastocyst formation.
Adding AR to IVM medium significantly improves oocyte maturation and fertilization rates.
AR in pre-insemination culture enhances maturation, fertilization, and embryo quality in IVF.
Abstract
Amphiregulin (AR) is a growth factor that resembles the epidermal growth factor (EGF) and serves various functions in different cells. However, no systematic studies or reports on the role of AR in human oocytes have currently been performed or reported. This study aimed to explore the role of AR in human immature oocytes during in vitro maturation (IVM) and in vitro fertilization (IVF) in achieving better embryonic development and to provide a basis for the development of a pre-insemination culture medium specific for cumulus oocyte complexes (COCs). First, we examined the concentration of AR in the follicular fluid (FF) of patients who underwent routine IVF and explored the correlation between AR levels and oocyte maturation and subsequent embryonic development. Second, AR was added to the IVM medium to culture immature oocytes and investigate whether AR could improve the effects of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReproductive Biology and Fertility · Ovarian function and disorders · Sperm and Testicular Function
