M.L. Seth-Smith
New York University
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Featured researches published by M.L. Seth-Smith.
Fertility and Sterility | 2013
Keri Kalmbach; D. Antunes; Roberta Dracxler; Taylor Warner Knier; M.L. Seth-Smith; Fang Wang; Lin Liu; David L. Keefe
Telomeres mediate biologic aging in organisms as diverse as plants, yeast, and mammals. We propose a telomere theory of reproductive aging that posits telomere shortening in the female germ line as the primary driver of reproductive aging in women. Experimental shortening of telomeres in mice, which normally do not exhibit appreciable oocyte aging, and which have exceptionally long telomeres, recapitulates the aging phenotype of human oocytes. Telomere shortening in mice reduces synapsis and chiasmata, increases embryo fragmentation, cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, spindle dysmorphologies, and chromosome abnormalities. Telomeres are shorter in the oocytes from women undergoing in vitro fertilization, who then produce fragmented, aneuploid embryos that fail to implant. In contrast, the testes are replete with spermatogonia that can rejuvenate telomere reserves throughout the life of the man by expressing telomerase. Differences in telomere dynamics across the life span of men and women may have evolved because of the difference in the inherent risks of aging on reproduction between men and women. Additionally, growing evidence links altered telomere biology to endometriosis and gynecologic cancers, thus future studies should examine the role of telomeres in pathologies of the reproductive tract.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Fang Wang; Xinghua Pan; Keri Kalmbach; M.L. Seth-Smith; Xiaoying Ye; Danielle M. F. Antumes; Yu Yin; Lin Liu; David L. Keefe; Sherman M. Weissman
Significance Telomeres are the structures at the ends of chromosomes that protect these ends from degradation or joining to one another. Telomeres consist of repeat DNA sequences and the length is gradually eroded as the cell ages. The ability to measure telomere length in individual cells would be important for studies of cell senescence, malignancy, stem cell renewal, and human fertility. We have developed a robust and practical method for estimating the telomere length of single cells, and used this method to demonstrate the heterogeneity or changes of telomere length in several systems. Measurement of telomere length currently requires a large population of cells, which masks telomere length heterogeneity in single cells, or requires FISH in metaphase arrested cells, posing technical challenges. A practical method for measuring telomere length in single cells has been lacking. We established a simple and robust approach for single-cell telomere length measurement (SCT-pqPCR). We first optimized a multiplex preamplification specific for telomeres and reference genes from individual cells, such that the amplicon provides a consistent ratio (T/R) of telomeres (T) to the reference genes (R) by quantitative PCR (qPCR). The average T/R ratio of multiple single cells corresponded closely to that of a given cell population measured by regular qPCR, and correlated with those of telomere restriction fragments (TRF) and quantitative FISH measurements. Furthermore, SCT-pqPCR detected the telomere length for quiescent cells that are inaccessible by quantitative FISH. The reliability of SCT-pqPCR also was confirmed using sister cells from two cell embryos. Telomere length heterogeneity was identified by SCT-pqPCR among cells of various human and mouse cell types. We found that the T/R values of human fibroblasts at later passages and from old donors were lower and more heterogeneous than those of early passages and from young donors, that cancer cell lines show heterogeneous telomere lengths, that human oocytes and polar bodies have nearly identical telomere lengths, and that the telomere lengths progressively increase from the zygote, two-cell to four-cell embryo. This method will facilitate understanding of telomere heterogeneity and its role in tumorigenesis, aging, and associated diseases.
Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics | 2015
D. Antunes; Keri Kalmbach; Fang Wang; Roberta Dracxler; M.L. Seth-Smith; Y.G. Kramer; J. Buldo-Licciardi; Fabiana Barzotti Kohlrausch; David L. Keefe
PurposeThe effect of age on telomere length heterogeneity in men has not been studied previously. Our aims were to determine the relationship between variation in sperm telomere length (STL), men’s age, and semen parameters in spermatozoa from men undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment.MethodsTo perform this prospective cross-sectional pilot study, telomere length was estimated in 200 individual spermatozoa from men undergoing IVF treatment at the NYU Fertility Center. A novel single-cell telomere content assay (SCT-pqPCR) measured telomere length in individual spermatozoa.ResultsTelomere length among individual spermatozoa within an ejaculate varies markedly and increases with age. Older men not only have longer STL but also have more variable STL compared to younger men. STL from samples with normal semen parameters was significantly longer than that from samples with abnormal parameters, but STL did not differ between spermatozoa with normal versus abnormal morphology.ConclusionThe marked increase in STL heterogeneity as men age is consistent with a role for ALT during spermatogenesis. No data have yet reported the effect of age on STL heterogeneity. Based on these results, future studies should expand this modest sample size to search for molecular evidence of ALT in human testes during spermatogenesis.
Reproductive Sciences | 2014
Roberta Dracxler; C. Oh; Keri Kalmbach; Fang Wang; L. Liu; Esper G. Kallas; Maria Teresa M. Giret; M.L. Seth-Smith; D. Antunes; David L. Keefe; Mauricio Simões Abrão
The etiology of endometriosis remains poorly understood but circulating stem cells may contribute. Telomeres shorten with cell divisions and age. Stem cells attempt to compensate for telomere attrition through the action of telomerase. Since circulating stem cells may contribute to endometriosis, we compared telomere content in lymphocytes of patients with and without endometriosis. Methods: Observational study comparing peripheral lymphocytes telomere content, measured by quantitative polymerase chain reaction, in patients with (n = 86) and without endometriosis (n = 21). Findings: Patients with endometriosis had longer telomeres than that of matched, endometriosis-free controls (telomere to single copy gene ratio [T/S ratio] of 1.62 vs 1.34, respectively, P = .00002). Patients with endometriosis were 8.1-fold more likely to have long telomeres. (odds ratio = 8.1, 95% confidence interval: 1.28-51.57, P = .0264). Interpretation: Longer telomeres could be consistent with a stem cell origin of endometriosis.
Fertility and Sterility | 2016
Jason D. Kofinas; Y.G. Kramer; D.H. McCulloh; M.L. Seth-Smith; David L. Keefe; Jamie Grifo
Fertility and Sterility | 2016
Jason D. Kofinas; L.G. Robinson; M.L. Seth-Smith; Y.G. Kramer; D.H. McCulloh; Fang Wang; J. Grifo; David L. Keefe
Fertility and Sterility | 2016
L. Wang; Fang Wang; L.G. Robinson; Y.G. Kramer; M.L. Seth-Smith; N.M. Sachdev; David L. Keefe
Fertility and Sterility | 2016
J.D. Kofinas; M.L. Seth-Smith; D.H. McCulloh; Y.G. Kramer; J. Grifo; David L. Keefe
Fertility and Sterility | 2016
L. Wang; Fang Wang; L.G. Robinson; Y.G. Kramer; M.L. Seth-Smith; N.M. Sachdev; David L. Keefe
Fertility and Sterility | 2014
D. Antunes; K.K. Kalmbach; Fang Wang; M.L. Seth-Smith; Y.G. Kramer; Fabiana Barzotti Kohlrausch; David L. Keefe