Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Large-scale transcriptional analysis of bovine embryo biopsies in relation to pregnancy success after transfer to recipients

257

Citations

66

References

2006

Year

TLDR

The study investigates how blastocyst biopsy gene expression predicts pregnancy success after transfer. The authors collected day‑7 blastocyst biopsies from 118 in‑vitro embryos, pooled them into three outcome groups, and profiled gene expression using a custom bovine preimplantation cDNA array and BlueChip. Microarray analysis identified 52 and 58 genes differentially expressed between non‑pregnant/resorbed and successful pregnancies, with successful embryos enriched for implantation, metabolism, growth factor, and signal‑transduction genes, while non‑pregnant embryos showed inflammatory, metabolic, and implantation‑inhibitor transcripts.

Abstract

The purpose of this work is to address the relationship between transcriptional profile of embryos and the pregnancy success based on gene expression analysis of blastocyst biopsies taken prior to transfer to recipients. Biopsies (30-40% of the intact embryo) were taken from in vitro-produced day 7 blastocysts (n = 118), and 60-70% were transferred to recipients after reexpansion. Based on the success of pregnancy, biopsies were pooled in three groups (each 10 biopsies) namely: those resulting in no pregnancy (G1), resorbed embryos (G2), and those resulting in calf delivery (G3). Gene expression analysis of these groups was performed using home-made bovine preimplantation-specific cDNA array (219 clones) and BlueChip (with approximately 2,000 clones). Microarray data analysis results revealed a total of 52 and 58 genes were differentially regulated during comparison between G1 vs. G3 and G2 vs. G3. Biopsies resulted in calf delivery were enriched with genes necessary for implantation (COX2 and CDX2), carbohydrate metabolism (ALOX15), growth factor (BMP15), signal transduction (PLAU), and placenta-specific 8 (PLAC8). Biopsies from embryos resulting in resorption are enriched with transcripts involved protein phosphorylation (KRT8), plasma membrane (OCLN), and glucose metabolism (PGK1 and AKR1B1). Biopsies from embryos resulting in no pregnancy are enriched with transcripts involved inflammatory cytokines (TNF), protein amino acid binding (EEF1A1), transcription factors (MSX1, PTTG1), glucose metabolism (PGK1, AKR1B1), and CD9, which is an inhibitor of implantation. In conclusion, we generated direct candidates of blastocyst-specific genes which may play an important role in determining the fate of the embryo after transfer.

References

YearCitations

Page 1