Title: GenomeWide Studies of Early Embryo Development
1Genome-Wide Studies of Early Embryo Development
- Rong Kong, Nell Keith, Rohith Reddy
- BIOE598SZ
- 10/11/2006
2Genome-Wide Studies of Embryo Development
- Questions
- Which genes are important in early embryo
development? - What are the expression patterns of these genes
over time? - Does in-vitro culture affect embryo development?
- Methods
- Genome-wide studied on preimplantation mouse
embryo - In vivo and in vitro
3In vivo and In vitro
- In vivo
- refer to experimentation done in or on the living
tissue of a living organism - e.g. animal testing and clinical trials
- In vitro
- refer to the technique of performing a given
experiment in a test tube, or, generally, in a
controlled environment outside a living organism - e.g. In vitro fertilization
4Some Ways to Identify Important Genes in
Development
- Molecular genetics
- Phenotype-based
- Examples gene knockout, over expression
- Successful in identifying gene functions
- Limited in early embryo
- Genome-scale expression analysis
- Expression-based
- More gene discovery
- Examples EST sequencing, suppression subtractive
hybridization, microarray
5Microarray Study
- Pros
- Expression-based, not phenotype-based
- High throughput compared with other methods
- Overall picture
- Quantitative results
- Cons
- Difficult to obtain sufficient RNA in early
embryo - Require linear amplification
Microarray-based gene expression studies had been
done in C. elegans and Drosophila.
6Stages of Early Development
7Oogenesis Germinal Vesicle (GV) and metaphase II
oocyte
8Fertilization Zygote
In animals, fertilization is the process that a
sperm fuses with an ovum, which eventually leads
to the development of an embryo.
9Zygotic Genome Activation (ZGA)
- The onset of new transcription
- Degradation of maternal transcripts
- ZGA happens during the transition from oocyte to
embryo
- Examples of maternal transcripts
- zp1-3 zona pellucida glycoproteins
- tPA oocyte maturation in meiosis II
10Cleavage 2-cell, 4-cell, 8-cell, Morula stages
Cleavage is the division of cells in the early
embryo. The zygotes undergo rapid cell cycles
with no significant growth, producing a cluster
of cells the same size as the original zygote.
1232 cells
11- Adhesion molecules
- ZO-1, Cx43
- integrin, Cadherin
A process that individual cells begin to adhere
tightly
12Blastocyst
A strucuture consisting of an inner cell mass (or
embryoblast) and an outer cell mass (or
trophoblast).
ICM gt embryonic stem cells
13Mid-preimplantation gene activation (MGA)
- Another wave of gene activation
- Companied by the dramatic morphological changes
- From compaction to morulae and blastocyst stages
14Implantation
A process in which blastocyst adheres to and
enters into the uterine wall.
15Some Signal Pathways
Notch pathway
Wnt pathway
16References
- Developmental Biology (7th Edition). Gilbert SF.
- Principles of Development. Wolpert L.
- Molecular Biology of the Cell. 4th Edition.
Alberts B, et al. - Wikipedia
17A Genome-Wide Study of Gene Activity Reveals
Developmental Signaling Pathways in the
Preimplantation Mouse Embryo
- Wang et. al., Developmental Cell, 2004
18Overview
- Examine variation in overall gene expression
levels during 12 stages of embryogenesis - In vivo study
- Relate expression profile of specific genes to
biological function - Explore conserved regulators of cell fate in
embryo development - Wnt pathway
- Notch pathway
19Gene Expression Consistency in Each Individual
Embryo Stage
- Embryos staged based on morphological criteria
- Transcription profiles examined with Affymetrix
Mouse - GeneChip
- Pearson correlation examined to assess
similarity between - profiles
20Gene Expression Variation in Consecutive Embryo
Stages
- Pearson correlation between consecutive embryo
development stages - Steeper curve indicates greater change in
transcript composition
213-Fold Change in Gene Expression Between Embryo
Stages
- Significant degradation of maternal mRNA during
meiotic maturation - Changes in gene expression less pronounced after
compaction
22Relative Levels of Transcription
- Determined percentage of genes receiving present
calls (P call ) - P call decrease during meiotic maturation due
to maternal mRNA degradation - After compaction and embryo layer development
changes in P call are difficult to detect
23Hierarchical Clustering
- 12 stages divided into two groups
- Change in gene expression reflects morphological
development of embryo
24Regulation of Gene Expression at Various Stages
during Preimplantation Development
- Peak expression level is set as 100 and the
expression levels at other time points are
normalized to percentage of peak level (peak) - Expression patterns of several maternal
transcripts during the transition from oocyte to
embryo Zp1-3, mos, tPA, and SLBP
25Regulation of Gene Expression at Various Stages
during Preimplantation Development
- Expression curves of ZO-1 and Cx43
- cell adhesion genes
- function during and after compaction
- Possible unknown function of ZO-1?
26Regulation of Gene Expression at Various Stages
during Preimplantation Development
- Expression curves of Eomes and Crtr-1, two genes
with lineage-specific functions. - Encode transcription factors that regulate cell
fate and pluripotency in the blastocyst.
27Maternal Transcription of Genes Implicated in
Setting Up Polarity
- mos and tPA were used as landmarks to focus
clustering - 57-gene cluster of maternal transcripts that are
most abundant during oocyte maturation - Relative expression levels
- Blue low level
- Red high level
- Colored coded genes involved in embryo
development - Blue resume cell cycle
- Red establish cell polarity
28Maternal Transcription of Genes Implicated in
Setting Up Polarity
- B Average trend of expression of the cluster
- C Immunofluorescent staining of ovarian sections
confirms expression of the DAG protein in GV
stage oocytes
29Comparison of Temporal Expression Patterns of
Oct4 Cofactors and Targets
- Pou5f1 encodes the transcription factor Oct4
- Sox2 is a cofactor of Oct4
- HMG2 is possible cofactor for Oct4
30Wnt and Notch Pathways
- Work in conjunction
- Wnt promotes division
- Notch promotes differentiation
- Stages of activity
- oocyte to embryo
- preceding implantation
31The Wnt Signaling Pathway Is Active at the
Blastocyst Stage
A-C Inner Cell Mass D-F Trophectoderm
- RNA encoding ß-catenin-GFP injected at 16-cell
stage and subcellular location examined in
blastocyst - Conclusions
- Wnt pathway active first in ICM
- Wnt pathway initiated before implantation
32Gene expression in preimplantation embryos from
In-vitro study
- Paper by Shunping Wang et al., Reproductive
Biomedicine Online, 2005
33Overview
- Hierarchical clustering of gene expression at
various developmental stages - Extent of Up and Down regulation
- 2- to 4-cell gene ontology
- Comparisons of gene expression patterns between
cultured (in-vitro) embryos and in-vivo embryos - Conclusion
34Hierarchical clustering of gene expression at
various developmental stages
- Results from Hierarchical clustering
- Clustering based on similarity of gene patterns
- Distance Pearsons correlation coefficient,
centroid linkage method used - Note the closeness and some intermixing of the
8-cell and compacting embryos, which indicates
similar expression profiles
35Extent of Up and Down regulation
- Figure shows the number of genes up and
down-regulated - The threshold was set as 2-fold change
- Note significant numbers of genes were up- and
down regulated when embryos developed from 1- to
2-cell stage, while almost no change was observed
between 8-cell and compacting embryos
36Extent of Up and Down regulation
- Developmental profile of gene regulation for both
in-vitro and in-vivo. - Y-axis represents the number of genes up- or
down-regulated, using 2-foId change as threshold.
- Note the similar trends of up-regulated genes for
both in vivo and in vitro., except the stage
between 2- and 4-cell stage.
372- to 4-cell gene ontology
- A significant number of genes (693 genes) were
observed between in-vitro and in-vivo embryos in
terms of up-regulated gene numbers when they
developed from 2- to 4-cell - Pie chart shows the gene ontology (the molecular
function of gene products) analysis of these 693
genes - Note that metabolism-related genes account tor
66 of the total genes
38Comparisons of gene expression patterns between
cultured embryos and in-vivo embryos
- E2F-1 is a transcription factor that plays an
important role in apoptosis (programmed cell
death) pathway in early embryos. - E2F-1 expression levels increased at 2-cell stage
and decreases after 4-cell stage - In-vivo and in-vitro plots are remarkably similar
- Caspase is a protease (helps breakdown proteins)
that is involved in initiating cellular events of
apoptosis in preimplantation stage embryos - Very little is known about where and when these
genes are expressed. - Low till 2-cell stage and increases till
compacting stage
39Comparisons of gene expression patterns between
cultured (in-vitro) embryos and in-vivo embryos
- Jak2 (Janus kinase 2) is involved in cytokine
signal transduction (inter-cell communication) - Previous data says Jak2 highest in unfertilized
oocytes then reduces after 4-cell stage - Present data shows that the level of this gene
slightly increases at 1- and 2-cell stages and
then reduces after 4-cell stage - LDH (Lactate dehydrogenase) enzyme that converts
lactate to pyruvate metabolism - Reported to be highest in zygote (1-cell) stage
and undetectable after 8-cell stage - Consistent with in-virto but in-vivo data does
not peak at zygote - Overall pattern is same in in-vivo and in-vitro
40Comparisons of gene expression patterns between
cultured embryos and in-vivo embryos
- Hexokinase is a catalyst for glycolysis
- It increases during later stages of human or
mouse embryo development - Previous study shows increased hexokinase level
in blastocysts - Current data shows a peak at 8-cell stage and
decrease after compaction - Alpha 6 Integrin adhesion molecules (play a
role in attachment of cell to extra-cellular
matrix) - Strong presence in the zygote stage
- The expression pattern of this gene for in-vivo
and in-vitro embryos are comparable
41Comparisons of gene expression patterns between
cultured embryos and in-vivo embryos
- Cadherin-11 mediates cell adhesion
- Both data differ slightly from previous data
where gene was detected only in blastocyst. - Peaks at the blastocyst stage
- In-vivo and In-vitro gene expressions are a bit
different for this data - DNAMT1 (DNA methyltransferase 1) is an enzyme
involved in DNA methylation - Not expressed in embryo after implantation but
expressed later in somatic proliferating cells - In this study the in-vitro data shows unique
expression pattern - In-vivo data has no such peaks
42Conclusions
- These microarrary-based expression studies gave
us a big picture of early embryo development - These studies provide an opportunity to discover
important genes involved in critical events that
determine future organism structure - In most stages of development there was minimal
difference in expression patterns between in
vitro and in vivo embryos