4.5 Article

Reproductive Outcomes from Maternal Loss of Nlrp2 Are Not Improved by IVF or Embryo Transfer Consistent with Oocyte-Specific Defect

Journal

REPRODUCTIVE SCIENCES
Volume 28, Issue 7, Pages 1850-1865

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s43032-020-00360-x

Keywords

Oocyte; Embryo; Epigenetics; Fetal development; Gamete biology; Genetics; Genomic imprinting; Molecular biology; Preimplantation embryo; Pregnancy

Funding

  1. Integramed
  2. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development [U54 HD083092]
  3. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P30CA125123]
  4. [R01HD079442]
  5. [R01HD092746]

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Loss of maternal Nlrp2 in mice leads to subfertility, smaller litters with birth defects, and growth abnormalities in offspring. In vitro fertilization does not further perturb or improve the development of embryos from Nlrp2-deficient females. The reproductive phenotype observed in offspring from Nlrp2-deficient females is oocyte-specific and not rescued by development in a wild-type uterus, with abnormal DNA methylation patterns persisting in surviving offspring.
Nlrp2 encodes a protein of the oocyte subcortical maternal complex (SCMC), required for embryo development. We previously showed that loss of maternal Nlrp2 in mice causes subfertility, smaller litters with birth defects, and growth abnormalities in offspring, indicating that Nlrp2 is a maternal effect gene and that all embryos from Nlrp2-deficient females that were cultured in vitro arrested before the blastocysts stage. Here, we used time-lapse microscopy to examine the development of cultured embryos from superovulated Nlrp2-deficient and wild-type mice after in vivo and in vitro fertilization. Embryos from Nlrp2-deficient females had similar abnormal cleavage and fragmentation and arrested by blastocyst stage, irrespective of fertilization mode. This indicates that in vitro fertilization does not further perturb or improve the development of cultured embryos. We also transferred embryos from superovulated Nlrp2-deficient and wild-type females to wild-type recipients to investigate if the abnormal reproductive outcomes of Nlrp2-deficient females are primarily driven by oocyte dysfunction or if a suboptimal intra-uterine milieu is a necessary factor. Pregnancies with transferred embryos from Nlrp2-deficient females produced smaller litters, stillbirths, and offspring with birth defects and growth abnormalities. This indicates that the reproductive phenotype is oocyte-specific and is not rescued by development in a wild-type uterus. We further found abnormal DNA methylation at two maternally imprinted loci in the kidney of surviving young adult offspring, confirming persistent DNA methylation disturbances in surviving offspring. These findings have implications for fertility treatments for women with mutations in NLRP2 and other genes encoding SCMC proteins.

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