Literature DB >> 12622701

Inositol transport in mouse oocytes and preimplantation embryos: effects of mouse strain, embryo stage, sodium and the hexose transport inhibitor, phloridzin.

B D Higgins1, M T Kane.   

Abstract

The uptake of myo-inositol by mouse oocytes and preimplantation embryos of a crossbred (DBA x C57BL/6) and a purebred outbred strain (MF1) was measured using [2-(3)H]myo-inositol. Uptake in crossbred embryos increased about 15-fold between the one- and two-cell stages and increased again by about sixfold at the blastocyst stage compared with the morula stage. Uptake in purebred embryos increased about 42-fold between the one- and two-cell stages and increased more than threefold at the blastocyst stage compared with the morula stage. In all stages examined, except two-cell crossbred embryos, inositol uptake was, depending on the stage, either largely or partly sodium dependent and could be inhibited by the sodium-dependent hexose transport inhibitor, phloridzin. This is consistent with the hypothesis that transport occurs via a sodium myo-inositol transporter (SMIT) protein. In addition, there was strong evidence that a sodium-independent mechanism of uptake, possibly a channel, was switched on at the two-cell stage coincident with zygotic gene activation which resulted in 141-fold and 71-fold increases in sodium-independent uptake from the one-cell to two-cell stages in crossbred and purebred embryos, respectively. This mechanism was either abolished or drastically downregulated at the blastocyst stage, whereas sodium-dependent uptake was markedly upregulated. In two-cell crossbred embryos, there was a complete abolition of sodium-dependent uptake, again possibly regulated by zygotic gene activation. The hypothesis that the changes in mechanism of inositol uptake at about the two-cell stage are due to zygotic gene activation was supported by the finding that these changes did not occur in parthenogenetic two-cell embryos.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12622701     DOI: 10.1530/rep.0.1250111

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Reproduction        ISSN: 1470-1626            Impact factor:   3.906


  4 in total

1.  A study of the composition of organic substances in early mouse embryos by proton magnetic resonance.

Authors:  V P Kutyshenko; T A Sviridova-Chailakhyan; A A Stepanov; L M Chailakhyan
Journal:  Dokl Biochem Biophys       Date:  2008 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 0.788

2.  Improvement of mouse embryo quality by myo-inositol supplementation of IVF media.

Authors:  Sandra Colazingari; Maria Teresa Fiorenza; Gianfranco Carlomagno; Robert Najjar; Arturo Bevilacqua
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2014-02-14       Impact factor: 3.412

3.  Evidence of haptoglobin in the porcine female genital tract during oestrous cycle and its effect on in vitro embryo production.

Authors:  Francisco A García-Vázquez; Carla Moros-Nicolás; Rebeca López-Úbeda; Ernesto Rodríguez-Tobón; Ascensión Guillén-Martínez; Jason W Ross; Chiara Luongo; Carmen Matás; Iván Hernández-Caravaca; Manuel Avilés; Mª José Izquierdo-Rico
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-06-08       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Myo-Inositol Safety in Pregnancy: From Preimplantation Development to Newborn Animals.

Authors:  Nilay Kuşcu; Mariano Bizzarri; Arturo Bevilacqua
Journal:  Int J Endocrinol       Date:  2016-09-06       Impact factor: 3.257

  4 in total

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