Single traumatic events that elicit an exaggerated stress response can lead to the development of neuropsychiatric conditions. Rodent studies suggested germline RNA as a mediator of effects of chronic environmental exposures to the progeny. The effects of an acute paternal stress exposure on the germline and their potential consequences on offspring remain to be seen. We find that acute administration of an agonist for the stress-sensitive Glucocorticoid receptor, using the common corticosteroid dexamethasone, affects the RNA payload of mature sperm as soon as 3 hr after exposure. It further impacts early embryonic transcriptional trajectories, as determined by single-embryo sequencing, and metabolism in the offspring. We show persistent regulation of tRNA fragments in sperm and descendant 2-cell embryos, suggesting transmission from sperm to embryo. Lastly, we unravel environmentally induced alterations in sperm circRNAs and their targets in the early embryo, highlighting this class as an additional candidate in RNA-mediated inheritance of disease risk.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2021.102870 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
August 2024
Department of Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, California, 95064.
PLoS Genet
March 2024
Lewis Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, United States of America.
C. elegans can learn to avoid pathogenic bacteria through several mechanisms, including bacterial small RNA-induced learned avoidance behavior, which can be inherited transgenerationally. Previously, we discovered that a small RNA from a clinical isolate of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, PA14, induces learned avoidance and transgenerational inheritance of that avoidance in C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
April 2024
Institute of Molecular Biotechnology of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (IMBA), Vienna BioCenter (VBC), Vienna, Austria.
Genomic imprinting-the non-equivalence of maternal and paternal genomes-is a critical process that has evolved independently in many plant and mammalian species. According to kinship theory, imprinting is the inevitable consequence of conflictive selective forces acting on differentially expressed parental alleles. Yet, how these epigenetic differences evolve in the first place is poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol Evol
December 2023
Institut für Populationsgenetik, Vetmeduni Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Stabilizing selection provides a challenge to molecular population genetics. Although stabilizing selection is ubiquitous, its genomic signature is difficult to distinguish from demographic signals. Experimental evolution provides a promising approach to characterize genomic regions exposed to stabilizing selection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
October 2023
Lewis Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA.
Previously, we discovered that a small RNA from a clinical isolate of PA14, induces learned avoidance and its transgenerational inheritance in . is an important human pathogen, and there are other in natural habitat, but it is unclear whether ever encounters PA14-like bacteria in the wild. Thus, it is not known if small RNAs from bacteria found in natural habitat can also regulate host behavior and produce heritable behavioral effects.
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