AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the age of the mare impacts the gene expression in equine blastocysts, revealing differences between younger (6-year-old) and older (over 10-year-old) mares.
  • Results showed that while maternal age did not affect embryo recovery rates or size, it did disturb gene expression related to mitochondria and protein metabolism, particularly in the inner cell mass.
  • The findings suggest that maternal aging can significantly impact embryo development and potentially contribute to reduced fertility in older mares, marking an important insight for the equine industry.

Article Abstract

Background: Breeding a mare until she is not fertile or even until her death is common in equine industry but the fertility decreases as the mare age increases. Embryo loss due to reduced embryo quality is partly accountable for this observation. Here, the effect of mare's age on blastocysts' gene expression was explored. Day 8 post-ovulation embryos were collected from multiparous young (YM, 6-year-old, N = 5) and older (OM, > 10-year-old, N = 6) non-nursing Saddlebred mares, inseminated with the semen of one stallion. Pure or inner cell mass (ICM) enriched trophoblast, obtained by embryo bisection, were RNA sequenced. Deconvolution algorithm was used to discriminate gene expression in the ICM from that in the trophoblast. Differential expression was analyzed with embryo sex and diameter as cofactors. Functional annotation and classification of differentially expressed genes and gene set enrichment analysis were also performed.

Results: Maternal aging did not affect embryo recovery rate, embryo diameter nor total RNA quantity. In both compartments, the expression of genes involved in mitochondria and protein metabolism were disturbed by maternal age, although more genes were affected in the ICM. Mitosis, signaling and adhesion pathways and embryo development were decreased in the ICM of embryos from old mares. In trophoblast, ion movement pathways were affected.

Conclusions: This is the first study showing that maternal age affects gene expression in the equine blastocyst, demonstrating significant effects as early as 10 years of age. These perturbations may affect further embryo development and contribute to decreased fertility due to aging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9199136PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-022-08593-7DOI Listing

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