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Effects of sex on response of the bovine preimplantation embryo to insulin-like growth factor 1, activin A,and WNT7A
Authors:Paula Tríbulo  Gulnur Jumatayeva  Khoboso Lehloenya  James I Moss  Veronica M Negrón-Pérez  Peter J Hansen
Institution:1.Department of Animal Sciences, D. H. Barron Reproductive and Perinatal Biology Research Program, and Genetics Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville,Gainesville,USA;2.Department of Agriculture,University of Zululand,KwaDlangez,South Africa;3.Present Address: Department of Innovative Technology of Reproduction and Biotechnology of Farm Animals, Kazakh Scientific Research Institute of Animal Breeding and Forage Production,Almaty,Kazakhstan;4.Present address: Department of Animal and Poultry Sciences,Blacksburg,USA
Abstract:

Background

Alterations in maternal environment can sometimes affect embryonic development in a sexually-dimorphic manner. The objective was to determine whether preimplantation bovine embryos respond to three maternally-derived cell signaling molecules in a sex-dependent manner.

Results

Actions of three embryokines known to increase competence of bovine embryos to develop to the blastocyst stage, insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1), activin A, and WNT member 7A (WNT7A), were evaluated for actions on embryos produced in vitro with X- or Y- sorted semen from the same bull. Each embryokine was tested in embryos produced by in vitro fertilization of groups of oocytes with either pooled sperm from two bulls or with sperm from individual bulls. Embryos were treated with IGF1, activin A, or WNT7A on day 5 of culture. All three embryokines increased the proportion of cleaved zygotes that developed to the blastocyst stage and the effect was similar for female and male embryos. As an additional test of sexual dimorphism, effects of IGF1 on blastocyst expression of a total of 127 genes were determined by RT-qPCR using the Fluidigm Delta Gene assay. Expression of 18 genes was affected by sex, expression of 4 genes was affected by IGF1 and expression of 3 genes was affected by the IGF1 by sex interaction.

Conclusion

Sex did not alter how IGF1, activin A or WNT7A altered developmental competence to the blastocyst stage. Thus, sex-dependent differences in regulation of developmental competence of embryos by maternal regulatory signals is not a general phenomenon. The fact that sex altered how IGF1 regulates gene expression is indicative that there could be sexual dimorphism in embryokine regulation of some aspects of embryonic function other than developmental potential to become a blastocyst.
Keywords:
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