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Genetic regulation of preimplantation mouse embryo survival

✍ Scribed by Warner, Carol M.; Exley, Ginger E.; McElhinny, Abigail S.; Tang, Chaoyu


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
236 KB
Volume
282
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-104X

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✦ Synopsis


The preimplantation period of mammalian development is characterized by cleavage of a one-cell embryo to a blastocyst stage embryo. During preimplantation development, 15%-50% of the embryos die as a result of factors that are largely unknown. Two parameters of preimplantation development, a fast rate of development and a low degree of fragmentation, are indicative of good embryo quality. There is mounting evidence that genes control both rate of development and degree of fragmentation. We have discovered a gene, Ped (preimplantation embryo development), which controls the rate of preimplantation embryonic cleavage. The Ped gene is encoded by two similar genes, Q7 and Q9, in the Q region of the mouse major histocompatibility complex (MHC). The Ped gene product is an MHC class Ib protein, the Qa-2 antigen. The mechanisms by which the Ped gene controls rate of embryonic cleavage division are being explored. In order to understand genetic mechanisms underlying the second criterion of embryo quality, degree of fragmentation, we have begun to assess expression of the genes that could potentially regulate apoptosis in preimplantation embryos. We have shown that staurosporine can induce apoptosis in mouse blastocysts. By using RT-PCR, we have shown that genes encoding proteins in the two major gene families that regulate apoptosis, the Bcl-2 and caspase gene families, are present in preimplantation embryos. We hypothesize that there is a homeostatic mechanism by which genes that regulate cell survival and those that regulate cell death determine the overall viability of preimplantation embryos.


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