SOX2 plays a crucial role in cell proliferation and lineage segregation during porcine pre‐implantation embryo development |
| |
Authors: | Mingyun Lee,Kwang‐ Hwan Choi,Jong‐ Nam Oh,Seung‐ Hun Kim,Dong‐ Kyung Lee,Gyung Cheol Choe,Jinsol Jeong,Chang‐ Kyu Lee |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Agricultural Biotechnology, Animal Biotechnology Major, and Research Institute of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Seoul National University, Gwanak‐gu Korea ; 2. Research and Development Center, Space F corporation, Hwasung Korea ; 3. Institute of Green Bio Science and Technology, Seoul National University, Pyeongchang Korea |
| |
Abstract: | ObjectivesGene regulation in early embryos has been widely studied for a long time because lineage segregation gives rise to the formation of a pluripotent cell population, known as the inner cell mass (ICM), during pre‐implantation embryo development. The extraordinarily longer pre‐implantation embryo development in pigs leads to the distinct features of the pluripotency network compared with mice and humans. For these reasons, a comparative study using pre‐implantation pig embryos would provide new insights into the mammalian pluripotency network and help to understand differences in the roles and networks of genes in pre‐implantation embryos between species.Materials and methodsTo analyse the functions of SOX2 in lineage segregation and cell proliferation, loss‐ and gain‐of‐function studies were conducted in pig embryos using an overexpression vector and the CRISPR/Cas9 system. Then, we analysed the morphological features and examined the effect on the expression of downstream genes through immunocytochemistry and quantitative real‐time PCR.ResultsOur results showed that among the core pluripotent factors, only SOX2 was specifically expressed in the ICM. In SOX2‐disrupted blastocysts, the expression of the ICM‐related genes, but not OCT4, was suppressed, and the total cell number was also decreased. Likewise, according to real‐time PCR analysis, pluripotency‐related genes, excluding OCT4, and proliferation‐related genes were decreased in SOX2‐targeted blastocysts. In SOX2‐overexpressing embryos, the total blastocyst cell number was greatly increased but the ICM/TE ratio decreased.ConclusionsTaken together, our results demonstrated that SOX2 is essential for ICM formation and cell proliferation in porcine early‐stage embryogenesis. |
| |
Keywords: | CRISPR/Cas9 SOX2 pig embryo |
|
|