Search

HarvardScience is a publication of the Harvard Office of News and Public Affairs devoted to all matters related to science at the various schools, departments, institutes, and hospitals of Harvard University.
Harvard Science medicine + health
Jonathan Tilly has used a model of human oocytes grafted into mice to study chemicals in cigarette smoke that trigger cellular suicide in eggs, illustrated in the background.

Photo by Graham Ramsay

Cell death in eggs traced to smoking

Pathway leads from pollutants to early menopause

August 31, 2001

A woman is born with just so many egg cells, called oocytes. When she begins ovulating, she has about 400. Even though that may seem like a lot, considering the few that would ever be fertilized, scientists have found that loss of oocytes influences a woman's health. Early loss of oocytes leads to early menopause and infertility. A study by researcher Jonathan Tilly, Harvard Medical School associate professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive biology at Massachusetts General Hospital, has found that chemicals in cigarette smoke and environmental pollutants can trigger egg loss. "There's a longstanding relationship between smoking and early menopause," Tilly said. Now, with a study that appeared in the August 2001 issue of Nature Genetics, Tilly has identified a genetic pathway that helps explain that relationship.

foundations environments animal, vegetable, + mineral medicine + health culture + society engineering + technology