Characterization of mitochondrial replication and transcription control during rat early development in vivo and in vitro.

Reproduction

Faculté de Médecine Vétérinaire, Centre de Recherche en Reproduction Animale, Université de Montréal, Saint-Hyacinthe, Québec, Canada J2S7C6 and Faculty of Bioindustry, Tokyo University of Agriculture, Abashiri, Hokkaido 099-2493, Japan.

Published: February 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • In vitro culture (IVC) is a key technique in reproductive technologies but imposes stress on embryos, affecting mitochondrial function.
  • The study measured mtDNA copy numbers and mitochondrial gene mRNA levels in rat oocytes and embryos, finding that IVC increased mtDNA copy number starting from the 8-cell stage.
  • Results indicate that IVC disrupts normal mitochondrial transcription and mtDNA replication control, which could lead to physiological and developmental issues in embryos created through these methods.

Article Abstract

In vitro culture (IVC), used in assisted reproductive technologies, is a major environmental stress on the embryo. To evaluate the effect of IVC on mitochondrial transcription and the control of mtDNA replication, we measured the mtDNA copy number and relative amount of mRNA for mitochondrial-related genes in individual rat oocytes, zygotes and embryos using real-time PCR. The average mtDNA copy number was 147 600 (+/-3000) in metaphase II oocytes. The mtDNA copy number was stable throughout in vivo early development and IVC induced an increase in mtDNA copy number from the 8-cell stage onwards. Gapd mRNA levels vary during early development and IVC did not change the patterns of these housekeeping gene transcripts. Polrmt mRNA levels did not vary during early development up to the morula stage but increased at the blastocyst stage. IVC induced the up-regulation of Polrmt mRNA, one of the key genes regulating mtDNA transcription and replication, at the blastocyst stage. An increase in mt-Nd4 mRNA preceded the blastocyst-related event observed in nuclear-encoded Gapd and Polrmt, suggesting that the expression of mitochondrial encoded genes is controlled differently from nuclear encoded genes. We conclude that the IVC system can perturb mitochondrial transcription and the control of mtDNA replication in rat embryos. This perturbation of mtDNA regulation may be responsible for the abnormal physiology, metabolism and viability of in vitro-derived embryos.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/REP-06-0263DOI Listing

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