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6 June 2018 Unpackaging the genetics of mammalian fertility: strategies to Identify the “reproductive genome”
John C. Schimenti, Mary Ann Handel
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Abstract

Gene mutations, including different alleles of the same gene, are tremendously useful in deconstructing complex developmental systems, such as reproduction, into component molecular pathways. For this reason, great effort has been devoted in the past three decades to biased (reverse genetic) and unbiased (forward genetic) searches for new genes that impactmammalian reproduction and fertility. These efforts have more recently been complemented with international efforts to systematically mutate all mouse genes and to determine their phenotypes (essentially a hybrid of forward and reverse genetics). Here, we survey the available data on the relative productivity of these approaches in identifying fertility genes, estimate the number of protein-coding genes essential for fertility of males and females, and predict the next major directions in the genetics of reproduction and fertility.

Summary Sentence

Strategies to identify the entire repertoire of mammalian genes required for fertility are reviewed.

© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for the Study of Reproduction. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com
John C. Schimenti and Mary Ann Handel "Unpackaging the genetics of mammalian fertility: strategies to Identify the “reproductive genome”," Biology of Reproduction 99(6), 1119-1128, (6 June 2018). https://doi.org/10.1093/biolre/ioy133
Received: 31 March 2018; Accepted: 5 June 2018; Published: 6 June 2018
KEYWORDS
fertility
genes
genome
Mutagenesis
oogenesis
spermatogenesis
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