Human chromosomes arranged on microscope slide with DNA helix and lab background showing genetic research

Scientists Reverse Age-Linked IVF Failure

At a Glance

  • Researchers restored a single protein to youthful levels in aging eggs
  • Treated human eggs showed a 46% drop in chromosome-separation errors
  • The technique could extend IVF viability for women over 40
  • Why it matters: Older women face steep odds in IVF; this may shift the odds back

Scientists report they have partially reversed a key defect that causes IVF failure in older women. By replenishing one protein that declines with age, they sharply reduced the rate of abnormal chromosome separation in eggs.

The Chromosome Problem

A viable embryo needs 46 chromosomes-23 from the egg, 23 from the sperm. Before fertilization, egg cells must halve their DNA through meiosis. Mistakes during this split produce aneuploid eggs, a condition that skyrockets after age 35.

  • Under 35: ~20% of eggs are aneuploid
  • Over 40: more than 50% are aneuploid
  • Aneuploidy is the leading cause of failed implantation and miscarriage in IVF

Protein Rescue in Lab Tests

Melina Schuh’s team at the Max Planck Institute zeroed in on Shugoshin 1 (SGO1), a protein that keeps chromosome pairs aligned until the exact moment of separation. Prior work showed SGO1 levels fall as eggs age.

Study design:

  • Microinjected purified SGO1 into mouse and human eggs
  • Human eggs were surplus patient samples from a fertility clinic
  • Compared chromosome segregation in treated vs. untreated cells

Results in human eggs:

Condition Improper Separation Rate
No treatment 53%
+ SGO1 29%

More than half of untreated eggs mis-segregated chromosomes, while fewer than one-third of treated eggs did.

Next Hurdles

The study, posted on bioRxiv, has not yet been peer-reviewed. The group will present data at the British Fertility Conference in Edinburgh.

Open questions:

  • Do lower error rates translate into live births?
  • Can SGO1 delivery be scaled to clinical-grade safety?
  • Will the method work in women who have already entered menopause? (Researchers doubt it)

Schuh and colleagues launched Ovo Labs to pursue further development and eventual commercialization.

Researchers studying microscope slide with egg cell showing chromosome pairs with SGO1 proteins at centromeres and aging grad

Güneş Taylor, a fertility researcher at the University of Edinburgh not involved in the work, called the approach critical: “We need methods that work for older eggs, because that’s when most women seek IVF.”

Key Takeaways

  • A single-protein fix cut chromosome errors by nearly half in lab eggs
  • If replicated, the technique could make IVF less of a gamble for women over 40
  • Safety and efficacy trials must still clear regulatory review before any clinical use

Author

  • My name is Ryan J. Thompson, and I cover weather, climate, and environmental news in Fort Worth and the surrounding region.

    Ryan J. Thompson covers transportation and infrastructure for newsoffortworth.com, reporting on how highways, transit, and major projects shape Fort Worth’s growth. A UNT journalism graduate, he’s known for investigative reporting that explains who decides, who pays, and who benefits from infrastructure plans.

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