"As early as the mid-30s, women start to experience declines in fertility, increased rates of miscarriage and maternal age-related birth defects," said Coleen Murphy from the Princeton University in the US.
"All of these problems are thought to be caused by declining egg quality, rather than a lack of eggs," said Murphy.
The researchers used a microscopic worm, Caenorhabditis elegans (C elegans), to study longevity.
For the study, published in the journal Current Biology, they investigated downregulated group of proteins, cathepsin B proteases, that are rare in high-quality eggs and more common in eggs that have begun degrading with age.
Another experiment that knocked out the cathepsin B genes entirely succeeded in extending worms fertility by about 10 percent.
"If applied to humans, it could be a three- to six-year extension of your reproductive period," said Nicole Templeman from Princeton University.
Reproductive decline is a hallmark of aging, but despite its prevalence, interventions to slow the loss of reproductive capacity are lacking, the researchers said.
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