4.5 Article

Loss of Genomic Imprinting in Mouse Embryos with Fast Rates of Preimplantation Development in Culture

期刊

BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION
卷 86, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1095/biolreprod.111.096602

关键词

DNA methylation; genomic imprinting; in vitro culture; metabolic genes; mouse embryo; preimplantation development

资金

  1. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at the University of Western Ontario
  2. Children's Health Research Institute
  3. Ministry of Research and Innovation [ER06-02-188]
  4. Ontario Women's Health Council/CIHR Institute of Gender and Health New Investigator Award
  5. NSERC Canada Graduate Scholarship
  6. CIHR Training Program in Reproduction
  7. Early Development and the Impact on Health (REDIH) Graduate Scholarship
  8. Obstetrics and Gynaecology Graduate Research Scholarship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Currently, the stage of embryo development has been proposed as one of many criteria for identifying healthy embryos in infertility clinics with the fastest embryos being highlighted as the healthiest. However the validity of this as an accurate criterion with respect to genomic imprinting is unknown. Given that embryo development in culture generally requires an extra day compared to in vivo development, we hypothesized that loss of imprinting correlates with slower rates of embryonic development. To evaluate this, embryos were recovered at the 2-cell stage, separated into four groups based on morphological stage at two predetermined time points, and cultured to blastocysts. We examined cell number, embryo volume, embryo sex, imprinted Snrpn and H19 methylation, imprinted Snrpn, H19, and Cdkn1c expression, and expression of genes involved in embryo metabolism-Atp1a1, Slc2a1, and Mapk14-all within the same individual embryo. Contrary to our hypothesis, we observed that faster developing embryos exhibited greater cell numbers and embryo volumes as well as greater perturbations in genomic imprinting and metabolic marker expression. Embryos with slower rates of preimplantation development were most similar to in vivo derived embryos, displaying similar cell numbers, embryo volumes, Snrpn and H19 imprinted methylation, H19 imprinted expression, and Atp1a1 and Slc2a1 expression. We conclude that faster development rates in vitro are correlated with loss of genomic imprinting and aberrant metabolic marker expression. Importantly, we identified a subset of in vitro cultured embryos that, according to the parameters evaluated, are very similar to in vivo derived embryos and thus are likely most suitable for embryo transfer.

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