After fertilization in animals, maternal mRNAs and proteins regulate development until the onset of zygotic transcription. In plants, the extent of maternal regulation of early embryo development has been less clear: two hybrid combinations of rice zygotes had a strong maternal transcript bias, while Arabidopsis Col/Cvi and Col/Ler hybrid embryos displayed symmetric and asymmetric parental genome activation, respectively. Here we explore parent-of-origin transcriptome behavior in the Arabidopsis Col/Tsu hybrid, which was previously shown to display maternal effects for embryo defective mutants indistinguishable from those of the reference ecotype Col. Analysis of Col/Tsu transcriptomes revealed a reciprocal maternal bias in thousands of genes in zygote-1 cell and octant stage embryos. Several lines of evidence suggest that this transient maternal bias is due to preferential transcription of maternal alleles in the zygote, rather than inheritance of transcripts from the egg. Our results extend previous observations that parent-of-origin contributions to early embryogenesis differ between hybrids of Arabidopsis, show that the maternal genome plays a predominant role in early embryos of Col/Tsu, and point to a maternal transcriptome bias in early embryos of the Arabidopsis reference ecotype Columbia.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dev.204449 | DOI Listing |
J Speech Lang Hear Res
March 2025
Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences, The University of Arizona, Tucson.
Purpose: The goal of this study was to examine potential mediators of the relationship between developmental language disorder (DLD) status and executive function performance.
Method: Participants included preschoolers, of whom 80 met the diagnostic criteria for DLD and 103 were categorized as having typical language abilities. Participants' nonverbal IQ and receptive vocabulary were assessed via standardized tests, and their executive function was tested using the Dimensional Change Card Sort.
Pediatr Infect Dis J
March 2025
Infectious Diseases Unit, Department of Pediatrics, IRCCS Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genoa, Italy.
J Immunol
February 2025
Herman B Wells Center for Pediatric Research, Department of Pediatrics, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, United States.
Food allergy has had a rapid rise in prevalence, and thus it is important to identify approaches to limit the development of food allergy early in life. Because maternal dietary supplementation with α-tocopherol (α-T), an isoform of vitamin E, during pregnancy and nursing increases neonate plasma levels of α-T and can limit neonate development of other allergies, we hypothesized that α-T can limit development of food allergy. To assess this, male mice with mutations in their skin barrier genes (FT-/- mice) were mated with wild-type females that received a diet supplemented with α-tocopherol or a control diet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Immunol
March 2025
Center for Translational Immunology, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Antibodies in human milk protect infants against infections, but currently no assay is described that is able to simultaneously measure all 9 antibody isotypes and subclasses immunoglobulins in human fluids, such as human milk. Our cohort "Protecting against Respiratory tract Infections through human Milk Analysis" (PRIMA) is focused on the relation between the occurrence of respiratory infections during the first year of life and concentration of maternal antibodies in breastfeeding. We developed and successfully validated a multiplex assay that is able to measure all nine antibody isotypes and subclasses in human plasma and milk (regardeless of the pathogen specificity), using a small sample volume.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Transl Med
March 2025
Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute, Oregon Health & Science University, Beaverton, OR 97006, USA.
Congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) is the leading infectious cause of neonatal neurological impairment worldwide, but the viral factors enabling vertical spread across the placenta remain undetermined. The pentameric complex (PC), composed of the subunits gH/gL/UL128/UL130/UL131A, has been demonstrated to be important for entry into nonfibroblast cells in vitro. These findings link the PC to broad cell tropism and virus dissemination in vivo, denoting all subunits as potential targets for intervention strategies and vaccine development.
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