| Literature DB >> 31588047 |
Lizhi Leng1, Jiya Sun2, Jinrong Huang3, Fei Gong1, Ling Yang4, Shuoping Zhang5, Xuye Yuan2, Fang Fang6, Xun Xu6, Yonglun Luo7, Lars Bolund7, Brock A Peters8, Guangxiu Lu9, Taijiao Jiang10, Fengping Xu11, Ge Lin12.
Abstract
To investigate the contribution of parental genomes to early embryogenesis, we profiled the single-cell transcriptomes of human biparental and uniparental embryos systematically from the 1-cell to the morula stage. We observed that uniparental embryos exhibited variable and decreased embryonic genome activation (EGA). Comparative transcriptome analysis identified 807 maternally biased expressed genes (MBGs) and 581 paternally biased expressed genes (PBGs) in the preimplantation stages. MBGs became apparent at the 4-cell stage and contributed to the initiation of EGA, whereas PBGs preferentially appeared at the 8-cell stage and might affect embryo compaction and trophectoderm specification. Regulatory network analysis revealed that DUX4, EGR2, and DUXA are key transcription factors in MBGs' expression; ZNF263 and KLF3 are important for PBGs' expression. We demonstrated that parent-specific DNA methylation might account for the expression of most PBGs. Our results provide a valuable resource to understand parental genome activation and might help to elucidate parent-of-origin effects in early human development.Entities:
Keywords: androgenetic embryos; biparental embryos; embryonic genome activation; maternally biased expressed genes; parent-of-origin effects; parthenogenetic embryos; paternally biased expressed genes; single-cell RNA sequencing
Year: 2019 PMID: 31588047 DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2019.09.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Stem Cell ISSN: 1875-9777 Impact factor: 24.633