Parental methylome reprogramming in human uniparental blastocysts reveals germline memory transition
- Jiawei Xu1,4,
- Yimin Shu2,
- Guidong Yao1,
- Yu Zhang3,
- Wenbin Niu1,
- Yile Zhang1,
- Xueshan Ma1,
- Haixia Jin1,
- Fuli Zhang1,
- Senlin Shi1,
- Yang Wang1,
- Wenyan Song1,
- Shanjun Dai1,
- Luyao Cheng1,
- Xiangyang Zhang1,
- Wei Xie3,
- Aaron J Hsueh2 and
- Yingpu Sun1
- 1 The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University, Center for Reproductive Medicine, Henan Key Laboratory of Reproduction and Genetics;
- 2 Stanford University School of Medicine;
- 3 Tsinghua University, Center for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, MOE Key Laboratory of Bioinformatics, Tsinghua-Peking Center for Life Sciences
Abstract
Uniparental embryos derived from only the mother (gynogenetic, GG) or the father (androgenetic, AG) are unique models for studying genomic imprinting and parental contributions to embryonic development. Human parthenogenetic embryos can be obtained following artificial activation of unfertilized oocytes, but the production of AG embryos by injection of two sperm into one denucleated oocyte leads to an extra centriole, resulting in multipolar spindles, abnormal cell division, and developmental defects. Here, we improved androgenote production by transferring the male pronucleus from one zygote into another haploid androgenote to prevent extra centrioles and successfully generated human diploid androgenetic embryos capable of developing into blastocysts with an identifiable inner cell mass (ICM) and trophectoderm (TE). The GG embryos were also generated. The zygotic genome was successfully activated in both the AG and GG embryos. DNA methylome analysis showed that the GG blastocysts partially retain the oocyte transcription-dependent methylation pattern, whereas the AG blastocyst methylome showed more extensive demethylation. The methylation states of most known imprinted differentially methylated regions (DMRs) were recapitulated in the AG and GG blastocysts. Novel candidate imprinted DMRs were also identified. The production of uniparental human embryos followed by transcriptome and methylome analysis is valuable for identifying parental contributions and epigenome memory transitions during early human development.
- Received October 21, 2020.
- Accepted July 22, 2021.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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