Parental genome unification is highly error-prone in mammalian embryos

2021 | journal article; research paper

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​Parental genome unification is highly error-prone in mammalian embryos​
Cavazza, T.; Takeda, Y.; Politi, A. Z.; Aushev, M.; Aldag, P.; Baker, C. & Choudhary, M. et al.​ (2021) 
Cell184(11) pp. 2860.e22​-2877.e22​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2021.04.013 

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

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Authors
Cavazza, Tommaso; Takeda, Yuko; Politi, Antonio Z.; Aushev, Magomet; Aldag, Patrick; Baker, Clara; Choudhary, Meenakshi; Bucevičius, Jonas; Lukinavičius, Gražvydas; Elder, Kay; Blayney, Martyn; Lucas-Hahn, Andrea; Niemann, Heiner; Herbert, Mary; Schuh, Melina 
Abstract
Most human embryos are aneuploid. Aneuploidy frequently arises during the early mitotic divisions of the embryo, but its origin remains elusive. Human zygotes that cluster their nucleoli at the pronuclear interface are thought to be more likely to develop into healthy euploid embryos. Here, we show that the parental genomes cluster with nucleoli in each pronucleus within human and bovine zygotes, and clustering is required for the reliable unification of the parental genomes after fertilization. During migration of intact pronuclei, the parental genomes polarize toward each other in a process driven by centrosomes, dynein, microtubules, and nuclear pore complexes. The maternal and paternal chromosomes eventually cluster at the pronuclear interface, in direct proximity to each other, yet separated. Parental genome clustering ensures the rapid unification of the parental genomes on nuclear envelope breakdown. However, clustering often fails, leading to chromosome segregation errors and micronuclei, incompatible with healthy embryo development.
Issue Date
2021
Journal
Cell 
Project
EXC 2067: Multiscale Bioimaging 
Working Group
RG Schuh 
ISSN
0092-8674
eISSN
1097-4172
Language
English

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