RNA profiles of porcine embryos during genome activation reveal complex metabolic switch sensitive to in vitro conditions

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Standard

RNA profiles of porcine embryos during genome activation reveal complex metabolic switch sensitive to in vitro conditions. / Østrup, Olga; Olbricht, Gayla; Østrup, Esben; Hyttel, Poul; Collas, Philippe; Cabot, Ryan.

I: PLoS ONE, Bind 8, Nr. 4, e61547, 2013.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Østrup, O, Olbricht, G, Østrup, E, Hyttel, P, Collas, P & Cabot, R 2013, 'RNA profiles of porcine embryos during genome activation reveal complex metabolic switch sensitive to in vitro conditions', PLoS ONE, bind 8, nr. 4, e61547. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061547

APA

Østrup, O., Olbricht, G., Østrup, E., Hyttel, P., Collas, P., & Cabot, R. (2013). RNA profiles of porcine embryos during genome activation reveal complex metabolic switch sensitive to in vitro conditions. PLoS ONE, 8(4), [e61547]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061547

Vancouver

Østrup O, Olbricht G, Østrup E, Hyttel P, Collas P, Cabot R. RNA profiles of porcine embryos during genome activation reveal complex metabolic switch sensitive to in vitro conditions. PLoS ONE. 2013;8(4). e61547. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061547

Author

Østrup, Olga ; Olbricht, Gayla ; Østrup, Esben ; Hyttel, Poul ; Collas, Philippe ; Cabot, Ryan. / RNA profiles of porcine embryos during genome activation reveal complex metabolic switch sensitive to in vitro conditions. I: PLoS ONE. 2013 ; Bind 8, Nr. 4.

Bibtex

@article{e7e9d5bcd2a54f7394bfedc80994d3c1,
title = "RNA profiles of porcine embryos during genome activation reveal complex metabolic switch sensitive to in vitro conditions",
abstract = "Fertilization is followed by complex changes in cytoplasmic composition and extensive chromatin reprogramming which results in the abundant activation of totipotent embryonic genome at embryonic genome activation (EGA). While chromatin reprogramming has been widely studied in several species, only a handful of reports characterize changing transcriptome profiles and resulting metabolic changes in cleavage stage embryos. The aims of the current study were to investigate RNA profiles of in vivo developed (ivv) and in vitro produced (ivt) porcine embryos before (2-cell stage) and after (late 4-cell stage) EGA and determine major metabolic changes that regulate totipotency. The period before EGA was dominated by transcripts responsible for cell cycle regulation, mitosis, RNA translation and processing (including ribosomal machinery), protein catabolism, and chromatin remodelling. Following EGA an increase in the abundance of transcripts involved in transcription, translation, DNA metabolism, histone and chromatin modification, as well as protein catabolism was detected. The further analysis of members of overlapping GO terms revealed that despite that comparable cellular processes are taking place before and after EGA (RNA splicing, protein catabolism), different metabolic pathways are involved. This strongly suggests that a complex metabolic switch accompanies EGA. In vitro conditions significantly altered RNA profiles before EGA, and the character of these changes indicates that they originate from oocyte and are imposed either before oocyte aspiration or during in vitro maturation. IVT embryos have altered content of apoptotic factors, cell cycle regulation factors and spindle components, and transcription factors, which all may contribute to reduced developmental competence of embryos produced in vitro. Overall, our data are in good accordance with previously published, genome-wide profiling data in other species. Moreover, comparison with mouse and human embryos showed striking overlap in functional annotation of transcripts during the EGA, suggesting conserved basic mechanisms regulating establishment of totipotency in mammalian development.",
author = "Olga {\O}strup and Gayla Olbricht and Esben {\O}strup and Poul Hyttel and Philippe Collas and Ryan Cabot",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0061547",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - RNA profiles of porcine embryos during genome activation reveal complex metabolic switch sensitive to in vitro conditions

AU - Østrup, Olga

AU - Olbricht, Gayla

AU - Østrup, Esben

AU - Hyttel, Poul

AU - Collas, Philippe

AU - Cabot, Ryan

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Fertilization is followed by complex changes in cytoplasmic composition and extensive chromatin reprogramming which results in the abundant activation of totipotent embryonic genome at embryonic genome activation (EGA). While chromatin reprogramming has been widely studied in several species, only a handful of reports characterize changing transcriptome profiles and resulting metabolic changes in cleavage stage embryos. The aims of the current study were to investigate RNA profiles of in vivo developed (ivv) and in vitro produced (ivt) porcine embryos before (2-cell stage) and after (late 4-cell stage) EGA and determine major metabolic changes that regulate totipotency. The period before EGA was dominated by transcripts responsible for cell cycle regulation, mitosis, RNA translation and processing (including ribosomal machinery), protein catabolism, and chromatin remodelling. Following EGA an increase in the abundance of transcripts involved in transcription, translation, DNA metabolism, histone and chromatin modification, as well as protein catabolism was detected. The further analysis of members of overlapping GO terms revealed that despite that comparable cellular processes are taking place before and after EGA (RNA splicing, protein catabolism), different metabolic pathways are involved. This strongly suggests that a complex metabolic switch accompanies EGA. In vitro conditions significantly altered RNA profiles before EGA, and the character of these changes indicates that they originate from oocyte and are imposed either before oocyte aspiration or during in vitro maturation. IVT embryos have altered content of apoptotic factors, cell cycle regulation factors and spindle components, and transcription factors, which all may contribute to reduced developmental competence of embryos produced in vitro. Overall, our data are in good accordance with previously published, genome-wide profiling data in other species. Moreover, comparison with mouse and human embryos showed striking overlap in functional annotation of transcripts during the EGA, suggesting conserved basic mechanisms regulating establishment of totipotency in mammalian development.

AB - Fertilization is followed by complex changes in cytoplasmic composition and extensive chromatin reprogramming which results in the abundant activation of totipotent embryonic genome at embryonic genome activation (EGA). While chromatin reprogramming has been widely studied in several species, only a handful of reports characterize changing transcriptome profiles and resulting metabolic changes in cleavage stage embryos. The aims of the current study were to investigate RNA profiles of in vivo developed (ivv) and in vitro produced (ivt) porcine embryos before (2-cell stage) and after (late 4-cell stage) EGA and determine major metabolic changes that regulate totipotency. The period before EGA was dominated by transcripts responsible for cell cycle regulation, mitosis, RNA translation and processing (including ribosomal machinery), protein catabolism, and chromatin remodelling. Following EGA an increase in the abundance of transcripts involved in transcription, translation, DNA metabolism, histone and chromatin modification, as well as protein catabolism was detected. The further analysis of members of overlapping GO terms revealed that despite that comparable cellular processes are taking place before and after EGA (RNA splicing, protein catabolism), different metabolic pathways are involved. This strongly suggests that a complex metabolic switch accompanies EGA. In vitro conditions significantly altered RNA profiles before EGA, and the character of these changes indicates that they originate from oocyte and are imposed either before oocyte aspiration or during in vitro maturation. IVT embryos have altered content of apoptotic factors, cell cycle regulation factors and spindle components, and transcription factors, which all may contribute to reduced developmental competence of embryos produced in vitro. Overall, our data are in good accordance with previously published, genome-wide profiling data in other species. Moreover, comparison with mouse and human embryos showed striking overlap in functional annotation of transcripts during the EGA, suggesting conserved basic mechanisms regulating establishment of totipotency in mammalian development.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84876899233&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0061547

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0061547

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84876899233

VL - 8

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 4

M1 - e61547

ER -

ID: 96336568