Literature DB >> 25956296

Molecular biology of the stress response in the early embryo and its stem cells.

Elizabeth E Puscheck1, Awoniyi O Awonuga, Yu Yang, Zhongliang Jiang, Daniel A Rappolee.   

Abstract

Stress is normal during early embryogenesis and transient, elevated stress is commonplace. Stress in the milieu of the peri-implantation embryo is a summation of maternal hormones, and other elements of the maternal milieu, that signal preparedness for development and implantation. Examples discussed here are leptin, adrenaline, cortisol, and progesterone. These hormones signal maternal nutritional status and provide energy, but also signal stress that diverts maternal and embryonic energy from an optimal embryonic developmental trajectory. These hormones communicate endocrine maternal effects and local embryonic effects although signaling mechanisms are not well understood. Other in vivo stresses affect the embryo such as local infection and inflammation, hypoxia, environmental toxins such as benzopyrene, dioxin, or metals, heat shock, and hyperosmotic stress due to dehydration or diabetes. In vitro, stresses include shear during handling, improper culture media and oxygen levels, cryopreservation, and manipulations of the embryo to introduce sperm or mitochondria. We define stress as any stimulus that slows stem cell accumulation or diminishes the ability of cells to produce normal and sufficient parenchymal products upon differentiation. Thus stress deflects downwards the normal trajectories of development, growth and differentiation. Typically stress is inversely proportional to embryonic developmental and proliferative rates, but can be proportional to induction of differentiation of stem cells in the peri-implantation embryo. When modeling stress it is most interesting to produce a 'runting model' where stress exposures slow accumulation but do not create excessive apoptosis or morbidity. Windows of stress sensitivity may occur when major new embryonic developmental programs require large amounts of energy and are exacerbated if nutritional flow decreases and removes energy from the normal developmental programs and stress responses. These windows correspond to zygotic genome activation, the large mRNA program initiated at compaction, ion pumping required for cavitation, the differentiation of the first lineages, integration with the uterine environment at implantation, rapid proliferation of stem cells, and production of certain lineages which require the highest energy and are most sensitive to mitochondrial inhibition. Stress response mechanisms insure that stem cells for the early embryo and placenta survive at lower stress exposures, and that the organism survives through compensatory and prioritized stem cell differentiation, at higher stress exposures. These servomechanisms include a small set of stress enzymes from the 500 protein kinases in the kinome; the part of the genome coding for protein kinases that hierarchically regulate the activity of other proteins and enzymes. Important protein kinases that mediate the stress response of embryos and their stem cells are SAPK, p38MAPK, AMPK, PI3K, Akt, MEK1/2, MEKK4, PKA, IRE1 and PERK. These stress enzymes have cytosolic function in cell survival at low stress exposures and nuclear function in modifying transcription factor activity at higher stress exposures. Some of the transcription factors (TFs) that are most important in the stress response are JunC, JunB, MAPKAPs, ATF4, XBP1, Oct1, Oct4, HIFs, Nrf2/KEAP, NFKB, MT1, Nfat5, HSF1/2 and potency-maintaining factors Id2, Cdx2, Eomes, Sox2, Nanog, Rex1, and Oct4. Clearly the stress enzymes have a large number of cytosolic and nuclear substrates and the TFs regulate large numbers of genes. The interaction of stress enzymes and TFs in the early embryo and its stem cells are a continuing central focus of research. In vitro regulation of TFs by stress enzymes leads to reprogramming of the stem cell when stress diminishes stem cell accumulation. Since more differentiated product is produced by fewer cells, the process compensates for fewer cells. Coupled with stress-induced compensatory differentiation of stem cells is a tendency to prioritize differentiation by increasing the first essential lineage and decreasing later lineages. These mechanisms include stress enzymes that regulate TFs and provide stress-specific, shared homeostatic cellular and organismal responses of prioritized differentiation.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25956296     DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-2480-6_4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Exp Med Biol        ISSN: 0065-2598            Impact factor:   2.622


  24 in total

1.  Serotonin signaling by maternal neurons upon stress ensures progeny survival.

Authors:  Srijit Das; Felicia K Ooi; Johnny Cruz Corchado; Leah C Fuller; Joshua A Weiner; Veena Prahlad
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-04-23       Impact factor: 8.140

Review 2.  Why AMPK agonists not known to be stressors may surprisingly contribute to miscarriage or hinder IVF/ART.

Authors:  Elizabeth E Puscheck; Alan Bolnick; Awoniyi Awonuga; Yu Yang; Mohammed Abdulhasan; Quanwen Li; Eric Secor; Erica Louden; Maik Hüttemann; Daniel A Rappolee
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2018-06-07       Impact factor: 3.412

Review 3.  Blastocyst-Derived Stem Cell Populations under Stress: Impact of Nutrition and Metabolism on Stem Cell Potency Loss and Miscarriage.

Authors:  Yu Yang; Alan Bolnick; Alexandra Shamir; Mohammed Abdulhasan; Quanwen Li; G C Parker; Elizabeth E Puscheck; D A Rappolee
Journal:  Stem Cell Rev Rep       Date:  2017-08       Impact factor: 5.739

4.  Commonly used fertility drugs, a diet supplement, and stress force AMPK-dependent block of stemness and development in cultured mammalian embryos.

Authors:  Alan Bolnick; Mohammed Abdulhasan; Brian Kilburn; Yufen Xie; Mindie Howard; Paul Andresen; Alexandra M Shamir; Jing Dai; Elizabeth E Puscheck; Daniel A Rappolee
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2016-05-26       Impact factor: 3.412

5.  Two-cell embryos are more sensitive than blastocysts to AMPK-dependent suppression of anabolism and stemness by commonly used fertility drugs, a diet supplement, and stress.

Authors:  Alan Bolnick; Mohammed Abdulhasan; Brian Kilburn; Yufen Xie; Mindie Howard; Paul Andresen; Alexandra M Shamir; Jing Dai; Elizabeth E Puscheck; Eric Secor; Daniel A Rappolee
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2017-09-15       Impact factor: 3.412

6.  Stress Forces First Lineage Differentiation of Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells; Validation of a High-Throughput Screen for Toxicant Stress.

Authors:  Quanwen Li; Erica Louden; Jordan Zhou; Sascha Drewlo; Jing Dai; Elizabeth E Puscheck; Kang Chen; Daniel A Rappolee
Journal:  Stem Cells Dev       Date:  2019-01-07       Impact factor: 3.272

7.  Using stem cell oxygen physiology to optimize blastocyst culture while minimizing hypoxic stress.

Authors:  Alan Bolnick; Awoniyi O Awonuga; Yu Yang; Mohammed Abdulhasan; Yufen Xie; Sichang Zhou; Elizabeth E Puscheck; Daniel A Rappolee
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2017-06-24       Impact factor: 3.412

8.  CoQ10 increases mitochondrial mass and polarization, ATP and Oct4 potency levels, and bovine oocyte MII during IVM while decreasing AMPK activity and oocyte death.

Authors:  M K Abdulhasan; Q Li; J Dai; H M Abu-Soud; E E Puscheck; D A Rappolee
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 3.412

9.  Associations Between Maternal Lifetime Stress and Placental Mitochondrial DNA Mutations in an Urban Multiethnic Cohort.

Authors:  Kelly J Brunst; Li Zhang; Xiang Zhang; Andrea A Baccarelli; Tessa Bloomquist; Rosalind J Wright
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2020-09-18       Impact factor: 13.382

10.  Stress Decreases Host Viral Resistance and Increases Covid Susceptibility in Embryonic Stem Cells.

Authors:  Mohammed Abdulhasan; Ximena Ruden; Benjamin Rappolee; Sudipta Dutta; Katherine Gurdziel; Douglas M Ruden; Awoniyi O Awonuga; Steve J Korzeniewski; Elizabeth E Puscheck; Daniel A Rappolee
Journal:  Stem Cell Rev Rep       Date:  2021-06-21       Impact factor: 6.692

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