Elsevier

Placenta

Volume 57, September 2017, Pages 175-182
Placenta

Negative uterine asynchrony retards early equine conceptus development and upregulation of placental imprinted genes

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.placenta.2017.07.007Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Equine conceptuses are unusually tolerant to uterine asynchrony.

  • Conceptus-uterine asynchrony delays equine conceptus development at the gene, cell and tissue level.

  • Equine conceptuses adapt to survive in a negatively asynchronous uterus.

  • This adaptation to uterine asynchrony appears to occur in the absence of major changes in epigenetic programming.

Abstract

Introduction

Placental imprinted genes appear to be sensitive indicators of an inappropriate pre-implantation environment. This study examined the effects of negative uterine asynchrony after embryo transfer (ET) on early horse embryo development, and yolk-sac membrane expression of DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) and equine specific placental imprinted genes.

Methods

Day 8 embryos were transferred to recipient mares on day 8 (synchronous) or day 3 (asynchronous) after ovulation, and conceptuses were recovered 6 or 11 days later (day 14 or 19 of development).

Results

Day 14 conceptuses recovered from an asynchronous uterus had a smaller embryonic disc, in which primitive streak development was visibly retarded compared to conceptuses from a synchronous uterus. Similarly, length, somite number and organogenesis were retarded in day 19 embryos after asynchronous ET. Maternal (GRB10, H19, IGF2R, PHLDA2) and paternal (IGF2, INSR, PEG3, PEG10, DIO3, NDN, SNRPN) imprinted genes and DNMTs (DNMT1, 3A and 3B) were all up-regulated between day 14 and 19 of pregnancy and, for most, mRNA expression was higher in synchronous than asynchronous day 19 yolk-sac membrane. Expression of the paternally imprinted gene HAT1 increased between day 14 and 19 of pregnancy, but was not affected by the asynchrony.

Discussion

Conceptus development and upregulation of DNMTs and imprinted genes were delayed rather than dysregulated after transfer into a negatively asynchronous uterus. We propose that this ability to ‘reset’ conceptus development to uterine stage is an adaptation that explains why horse embryos are unusually tolerant of asynchrony after ET.

Keywords

Uterine environment
Conceptus
Embryo transfer
Imprinted genes

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