Nuclear and nuclear reprogramming during the first cell cycle in bovine nuclear transfer embryos

Olga Østrup, Ida Petrovicova, Frantisek Strejcek, Martin Morovic, Andrea Lucas-Hahn, Erika Lemme, Bjorn Petersen, Heiner Niemann, Jozef Laurincik, Poul Hyttel

    10 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Abstract The immediate events of genomic reprogramming at somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) are to high degree unknown. This study was designed to evaluate the nuclear and nucleolar changes during the first cell cycle. Bovine SCNT embryos were produced from starved bovine fibroblasts and fixed at 0.5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 12, and 16 h postactivation (hpa). Parthenogenetic (PA) embryos were used as control. The SCNT and PA embryos were processed for lacmoid staining, autoradiography, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and immunofluorescence localization of: upstream binding factor (UBF) and fibrillarin at 4 and 12 hpa. Likewise, starved and nonstarved fibroblasts were processed for autoradiography and TEM. The fibroblasts displayed strong transcriptional activity and active fibrillogranular nucleoli. None of the reconstructed embryos, however, displayed transcriptional activity. In conclusion, somatic cell nuclei introduced into enucleated oocytes displayed chromatin condensation, partial nuclear envelope breakdown, nucleolar desegregation and transcriptional quiescence already at 0.5 hpa. Somatic cell cytoplasm remained temporally attached to introduced nucleus and nucleolus was partially restored indicating somatic influence in the early SCNT phases. At 1-3 hpa, chromatin gradually decondensed toward the nucleus periphery and nuclear envelope reformed. From 4 hpa, the somatic cell nucleus gained a PN-like appearance and displayed NPBs suggesting ooplasmic control of development.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalCloning and Stem Cells
    Volume11
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)367-375
    Number of pages9
    ISSN1536-2302
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2009

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