4.8 Article

The first murine zygotic transcription is promiscuous and uncoupled from splicing and 3′ processing

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 34, Issue 11, Pages 1523-1537

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.15252/embj.201490648

Keywords

gene expression; preimplantation mouse embryo; pre-mRNA splicing; RNA-Seq; transcription

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan [20062002, 25252054]
  2. NIH [HD022681]
  3. European Commission Seventh Framework Program (Integra-Life) [315997]
  4. EMBO Young Investigator Program [1431/2006]
  5. Croatian Ministry of Science, Education and Sports [119-0982913-1211]
  6. Czech Science Foundation [P305/12/G034]
  7. Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic [M200521202]
  8. Czech Ministry of Education [KONTAKT II LH13084]
  9. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26112507, 26292172, 25112001, 15K21737, 25252054] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Initiation of zygotic transcription in mammals is poorly understood. In mice, zygotic transcription is first detected shortly after pronucleus formation in 1-cell embryos, but the identity of the transcribed loci and mechanisms regulating their expression are not known. Using total RNA-Seq, we have found that transcription in 1-cell embryos is highly promiscuous, such that intergenic regions are extensively expressed and thousands of genes are transcribed at comparably low levels. Striking is that transcription can occur in the absence of defined core-promoter elements. Furthermore, accumulation of translatable zygotic mRNAs is minimal in 1-cell embryos because of inefficient splicing and 30 processing of nascent transcripts. These findings provide novel insights into regulation of gene expression in 1-cell mouse embryos that may confer a protective mechanism against precocious gene expression that is the product of a relaxed chromatin structure present in 1-cell embryos. The results also suggest that the first zygotic transcription itself is an active component of chromatin remodeling in 1-cell embryos.

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