Mice produce monkey sperm.

PositionReproduction - Brief Article

Researchers successfully have produced monkey sperm by transplanting tissue from the testicles of rhesus monkeys onto the backs of mice in a study that has implications for biomedical research, human medicine, and endangered-species conservation.

Stuart Meyers and Ina Dobrinski, veterinary school scientists at the University of California, Davis, and the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, respectively, took small tissue fragments--less than one millimeter in diameter--from the testicles of sexually immature rhesus macaque monkeys and grafted the fragments onto the backs of male mice. In as little as seven months, the grafts began to produce mature sperm. The researchers gathered sperm from the grafts and used it to fertilize eggs from rhesus macaque monkeys, demonstrating that the sperm was capable of supporting embryo development.

"The transplants enabled us to produce mature sperm from immature 13-month-old rhesus monkeys in as little as seven months, whereas it would have taken nearly two more years for the monkeys to produce...

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