1. Academic Validation
  2. Dynamic changes in the localization of five members of the methyl binding domain (MBD) gene family during murine and bovine preimplantation embryo development

Dynamic changes in the localization of five members of the methyl binding domain (MBD) gene family during murine and bovine preimplantation embryo development

  • Mol Reprod Dev. 2008 Jan;75(1):48-59. doi: 10.1002/mrd.20712.
Nancy T Ruddock-D'Cruz 1 Jun Xue Katrina J Wilson Corey Heffernan Sivachelvi Prashadkumar Melissa A Cooney L Gabriel Sanchez-Partida Andrew J French Michael K Holland
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Monash Institute of Medical Research, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia. nancy.dcruz@med.monash.edu.au
Abstract

There are five methyl binding domain (MBD) proteins characterized by a methyl CpG-binding domain. Four MBD proteins (MeCP2 and MBDs 1-3) are linked to transcriptional repression and one (MBD4), to DNA repair. During preimplantation development, the embryo undergoes global demethylation following fertilization and selective remethylation following the maternal to zygotic transition (MZT). This study characterized changes in MBD mRNA expression and protein localization during both murine and bovine preimplantation development. These species were selected because they undergo MZT at different developmental stages. Gene expression profiling during preimplantation development detected the presence of all MBDs examined, although stage and species-specific differences were observed. MBD2 was not expressed in murine or bovine oocytes and MeCP2 was not detected in murine blastocysts, subcellular protein localization was found to vary at time points critical in development. Most MBDs showed species-specificity in localization patterns and differences were found between individual MBDs. MBD1 localization is consistent with a novel role during MZT for both species. MBD3, known to play a crucial role in murine embryogenesis, was highly localized to the nucleus before and after, but not during the MZT in the bovine. MBD2, MBD4, and MeCP2 show varying patterns of localization which indicate possible roles in the early cleavage stages and in inner cell mass differentiation. Further experiments are currently underway to define discreet functional roles for specific MBDs during bovine preimplantation embryogenesis.

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