4.5 Article

On Mammalian Totipotency: What Is the Molecular Underpinning for the Totipotency of Zygote?

Journal

STEM CELLS AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 28, Issue 14, Pages 897-906

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/scd.2019.0057

Keywords

zygote; totipotency; embryogenesis; embryonic stem cells; reprogramming; blastomere; epigenetic totipotency

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health

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The mammalian zygote is described as a totipotent cell in the literature, but this characterization is elusive ignoring the molecular underpinnings. Totipotency can connote genetic totipotency, epigenetic totipotency, or the reprogramming capacity of a cell to epigenetic totipotency. Here, the implications of these concepts are discussed in the context of the properties of the zygote. Although genetically totipotent as any diploid somatic cell is, a zygote seems not totipotent transcriptionally, epigenetically, or functionally. Yet, a zygote may retain most of the key factors from its parental oocyte to reprogram an implanted differentiated genome or the zygote genome toward totipotency. This totipotent reprogramming process may extend to blastomeres in the two-cell-stage embryo. Thus, a revised alternative model of mammalian cellular totipotency is proposed, in which an epigenetically totipotent cell exists after the major embryonic genome activation and before the separation of the first two embryonic lineages.

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