Molecular contribution to embryonic aneuploidy and genotypic complexity during initial cleavage divisions of mammalian development

2020 
ABSTRACT Embryonic aneuploidy is highly complex, often leading to developmental arrest, implantation failure, or spontaneous miscarriage in both natural and assisted reproduction. Despite our knowledge of mitotic mis-segregation in somatic cells, the molecular pathways regulating chromosome fidelity during the error-prone cleavage-stage of mammalian embryogenesis remain largely undefined. Using bovine embryos and live-cell fluorescent imaging, we observed frequent micro-/multi-nucleation of anaphase lagging or mis-segregated chromosomes in initial mitotic divisions that underwent unilateral inheritance, re-fused with the primary nucleus, or formed a chromatin bridge with neighboring cells. A correlation between a lack of maternal and paternal pronuclei fusion (syngamy), multipolar cytokinesis, and uniparental genome segregation was also revealed and single-cell DNA-seq showed propagation of primarily non-reciprocal mitotic errors in embryonic blastomeres. Depletion of the mitotic checkpoint protein, BUB1B/BUBR1, resulted in micro-/multi-nuclei formation, atypical cytokinesis, chaotic aneuploidy, and disruption of the kinase-substrate network regulating mitotic progression and exit, culminating in embryo arrest prior to genome activation. This demonstrates that embryonic micronuclei sustain multiple fates, provides a mechanism for blastomeres with uniparental origins, and substantiates the contribution of defective checkpoint signaling and/or the inheritance of other maternally-derived factors to the high genotypic complexity afflicting preimplantation development in higher-order mammals.
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