[HTML][HTML] Maternally expressed NLRP2 links the subcortical maternal complex (SCMC) to fertility, embryogenesis and epigenetic reprogramming

S Mahadevan, V Sathappan, B Utama, I Lorenzo… - Scientific Reports, 2017 - nature.com
S Mahadevan, V Sathappan, B Utama, I Lorenzo, K Kaskar, IB Van den Veyver
Scientific Reports, 2017nature.com
Mammalian parental genomes contribute differently to early embryonic development. Before
activation of the zygotic genome, the maternal genome provides all transcripts and proteins
required for the transition from a highly specialized oocyte to a pluripotent embryo. Depletion
of these maternally-encoded transcripts frequently results in failure of preimplantation
embryonic development, but their functions in this process are incompletely understood. We
found that female mice lacking NLRP2 are subfertile because of early embryonic loss and …
Abstract
Mammalian parental genomes contribute differently to early embryonic development. Before activation of the zygotic genome, the maternal genome provides all transcripts and proteins required for the transition from a highly specialized oocyte to a pluripotent embryo. Depletion of these maternally-encoded transcripts frequently results in failure of preimplantation embryonic development, but their functions in this process are incompletely understood. We found that female mice lacking NLRP2 are subfertile because of early embryonic loss and the production of fewer offspring that have a wide array of developmental phenotypes and abnormal DNA methylation at imprinted loci. By demonstrating that NLRP2 is a member of the subcortical maternal complex (SCMC), an essential cytoplasmic complex in oocytes and preimplantation embryos with poorly understood function, we identified imprinted postzygotic DNA methylation maintenance, likely by directing subcellular localization of proteins involved in this process, such as DNMT1, as a new crucial role of the SCMC for mammalian reproduction.
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