Breakthrough Mouse Model Mimics Egg Aging, Promising Advances in Fertility Science

December 5, 2025
Breakthrough Mouse Model Mimics Egg Aging, Promising Advances in Fertility Science
  • A new mouse egg model replicates aging-like changes to study why human eggs increasingly develop chromosomal errors with age, without needing aged human eggs or waiting for mice to age.

  • The findings suggest that breaking the chromosomes’ molecular glue is a major driver of age-related aneuploidy, though real aging likely results from multiple interacting factors in a cumulative process.

  • Researchers use CRISPR to insert a controllable degradation switch in REC8, a core component of the chromosomal glue, enabling aging-like changes in eggs within about an hour to a day.

  • The model could be used to test preventive measures and therapies aimed at reducing chromosomal errors in eggs, with potential benefits for women planning pregnancies later in life.

  • Degrading REC8 to different extents raises chromosomal mis-segregation and aneuploidy, revealing a threshold where error rates spike and indicating a breakdown of the chromosome-separating machinery as eggs age.

  • In addition to REC8, researchers perturb other cohesion proteins and the separating filaments to model multiple aging-related declines and amplify error rates.

  • The mouse model provides a consistent, ethical platform to study egg aging and to screen treatments that could extend the reproductive window or improve egg quality in IVF.

Summary based on 1 source


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