33 research outputs found

    Uncoupled Embryonic and Extra-Embryonic Tissues Compromise Blastocyst Development after Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer

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    Somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) is the most efficient cell reprogramming technique available, especially when working with bovine species. Although SCNT blastocysts performed equally well or better than controls in the weeks following embryo transfer at Day 7, elongation and gastrulation defects were observed prior to implantation. To understand the developmental implications of embryonic/extra-embryonic interactions, the morphological and molecular features of elongating and gastrulating tissues were analysed. At Day 18, 30 SCNT conceptuses were compared to 20 controls (AI and IVP: 10 conceptuses each); one-half of the SCNT conceptuses appeared normal while the other half showed signs of atypical elongation and gastrulation. SCNT was also associated with a high incidence of discordance in embryonic and extra-embryonic patterns, as evidenced by morphological and molecular “uncoupling”. Elongation appeared to be secondarily affected; only 3 of 30 conceptuses had abnormally elongated shapes and there were very few differences in gene expression when they were compared to the controls. However, some of these differences could be linked to defects in microvilli formation or extracellular matrix composition and could thus impact extra-embryonic functions. In contrast to elongation, gastrulation stages included embryonic defects that likely affected the hypoblast, the epiblast, or the early stages of their differentiation. When taking into account SCNT conceptus somatic origin, i.e. the reprogramming efficiency of each bovine ear fibroblast (Low: 0029, Med: 7711, High: 5538), we found that embryonic abnormalities or severe embryonic/extra-embryonic uncoupling were more tightly correlated to embryo loss at implantation than were elongation defects. Alternatively, extra-embryonic differences between SCNT and control conceptuses at Day 18 were related to molecular plasticity (high efficiency/high plasticity) and subsequent pregnancy loss. Finally, because it alters re-differentiation processes in vivo, SCNT reprogramming highlights temporally and spatially restricted interactions among cells and tissues in a unique way

    Telomere reprogramming early in development and cloning

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    Reply to Comment by Terence McCarthy and Marc Humphries on “Highly Contrasted Geochemical Pattern in Sediments of the Okavango Delta, Botswana Driven by Dust Supply, Hydrological Heritage and Biogeochemical Reactions”

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    International audienceIn southern Africa, the Okavango Delta is a large alluvial fan sustaining a unique wetlands ecosystem in the heart of the Kalahari desert. The Delta is fed by an annual flood that brings water from the Angolan plateaus to the north, down to the Okavango region. The fan is characterized by vegetated, permanent or seasonal floodplains, dotted with thousands of sandy islands of various origin (inverted paleo-channels, paleo-dunes, meander bars, etc). On at least some of these islands, shallow groundwater is characterized by a high pH (>8) and a high concentration of metals and metalloids, making it naturally toxic. In the 1990s, McCarthy and co-workers explain the chemistry of that water through an evapotranspiration model, the flood-water being pumped by the vegetation toward the center of the islands and progressively enriched in elements by evapotranspiration. This model has been widely applied to all islands in the Okavango, not considering their individual specificities nor that of the surrounding floodplain. Our work, based on a multidisciplinary approach including sedimentology, mineralogy and geochemistry, and discussed by McCarthy and Humphries, questions the established model suggesting that the alkaline water cannot derive from simple concentration of the floodwater

    Altered Gene Expression Profiles in the Brain, Kidney, and Lung of Deceased Neonatal Cloned Pigs

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    Limited studies have been published analyzing the gene expression patterns of cloned pigs. We compared the expression profiles of brain, kidney, and lung tissues, representing each of the three germ layers, of deceased neonatal cloned pigs with those of age-matched controls using a 13K oligonucleotide microarray. We found 42 (0.7% of total genes analyzed), 178 (2.9%), and 121 (1.9%) genes differentially expressed in the brain, kidney, and lung of clones, respectively, when compared with the corresponding organs from controls (fold change >1.5, p < 0.05, false discovery rate (FDR) = 0.05). These expression aberrations could potentially cause the following pathological anomalies in clones: diabetic nephropathy in the kidney and dysregulated surfactant homeostasis in the lung. Interestingly, upregulated expression of genes belonging to the MAPK pathway was observed in all three organs. To investigate whether the differences in levels of gene expression were caused by differential DNA methylation, the global DNA methylation level was measured by high-performance liquid chromatography. In controls, global concentration of methylated cytosine was 5.35%, whereas clones had significantly hypomethylated genomic DNA (4.57%). Bisulfite-pyrosequencing analyses of the promoter regions of differentially expressed candidate genes, c-MYC, Period 1 (PER1), Cathepsin L (CTSL), and Follistatin (FS), however, did not show any differences in the degree of DNA methylation between controls and clones. Our findings demonstrate that deceased neonatal cloned pigs have considerable gene expression abnormalities, which may have contributed to the death of the animals
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