AI Article Synopsis

  • In vitro culture systems have improved for mammalian embryos, but embryos developed in vitro still lag behind those developed in vivo in terms of quality and developmental capability.
  • A study analyzed protein expression in bovine embryos at various stages, identifying 3,028 proteins and showing distinct differences in protein abundance based on the embryo's origin (in vivo vs. in vitro).
  • Proteins more abundant in in vivo embryos were linked to carbohydrate metabolism, while in vitro embryos showed different protein localization and functions, particularly in mitochondrial activity at early stages and protein synthesis later, indicating that maternal conditions significantly affect embryonic development.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite many improvements with in vitro culture systems, the quality and developmental ability of mammalian embryos produced in vitro are still lower than their in vivo counterparts. Though previous studies have evidenced differences in gene expression between in vivo- and in vitro-derived bovine embryos, there is no comparison at the protein expression level.

Results: A total of 38 pools of grade-1 quality bovine embryos at the 4-6 cell, 8-12 cell, morula, compact morula, and blastocyst stages developed either in vivo or in vitro were analyzed by nano-liquid chromatography coupled with label-free quantitative mass spectrometry, allowing for the identification of 3,028 proteins. Multivariate analysis of quantified proteins showed a clear separation of embryo pools according to their in vivo or in vitro origin at all stages. Three clusters of differentially abundant proteins (DAPs) were evidenced according to embryo origin, including 463 proteins more abundant in vivo than in vitro across development and 314 and 222 proteins more abundant in vitro than in vivo before and after the morula stage, respectively. The functional analysis of proteins found more abundant in vivo showed an enrichment in carbohydrate metabolism and cytoplasmic cellular components. Proteins found more abundant in vitro before the morula stage were mostly localized in mitochondrial matrix and involved in ATP-dependent activity, while those overabundant after the morula stage were mostly localized in the ribonucleoprotein complex and involved in protein synthesis. Oviductin and other oviductal proteins, previously shown to interact with early embryos, were among the most overabundant proteins after in vivo development.

Conclusions: The maternal environment led to higher degradation of mitochondrial proteins at early developmental stages, lower abundance of proteins involved in protein synthesis at the time of embryonic genome activation, and a global upregulation of carbohydrate metabolic pathways compared to in vitro production. Furthermore, embryos developed in vivo internalized large amounts of oviductin and other proteins probably originated in the oviduct as soon as the 4-6 cell stage. These data provide new insight into the molecular contribution of the mother to the developmental ability of early embryos and will help design better in vitro culture systems.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9764490PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-022-09076-5DOI Listing

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