Essential shared and species-specific features of mammalian oocyte maturation-associated transcriptome changes impacting oocyte physiology

哺乳动物卵母细胞成熟相关转录组变化的基本共有特征和物种特异性特征,这些变化影响卵母细胞生理

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Abstract

Oogenesis is a complex process resulting in the production of a truly remarkable cell-the oocyte. Oocytes execute many unique processes and functions such as meiotic segregation of maternal genetic material, and essential life-generating functions after fertilization including posttranscriptional support of essential homeostatic and metabolic processes, and activation and reprogramming of the embryonic genome. An essential goal for understanding female fertility and infertility in mammals is to discover critical features driving the production of quality oocytes, particularly the complex regulation of oocyte maternal mRNAs. We report here the first in-depth meta-analysis of oocyte maturation-associated transcriptome changes, using eight datasets encompassing 94 RNAseq libraries for human, rhesus monkey, mouse, and cow. A majority of maternal mRNAs are regulated in a species-restricted manner, highlighting considerable divergence in oocyte transcriptome handling during maturation. We identified 121 mRNAs changing in relative abundance similarly across all four species (92 of high homology), and 993 (670 high homology) mRNAs regulated similarly in at least three of the four species, corresponding to just 0.84% and 6.9% of mRNAs analyzed. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) revealed an association of these shared mRNAs with many shared pathways and functions, most prominently oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial function. These shared functions were reinforced further by primate-specific and species-specific differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Thus, correct downregulation of mRNAs related to oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial function is a major shared feature of mammalian oocyte maturation.

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