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Higher chromatin mobility supports totipotency and precedes pluripotency in vivo

Authors :
Coralie Spiegelhalter
André Eid
Ana Bošković
Maria-Elena Torres-Padilla
Takashi Ishiuchi
Julien Pontabry
Edupuganti V.S. Raghu Ram
Eran Meshorer
Source :
Genes & Development
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The fusion of the gametes upon fertilization results in the formation of a totipotent cell. Embryonic chromatin is expected to be able to support a large degree of plasticity. However, whether this plasticity relies on a particular conformation of the embryonic chromatin is unknown. Moreover, whether chromatin plasticity is functionally linked to cellular potency has not been addressed. Here, we adapted fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) in the developing mouse embryo and show that mobility of the core histones H2A, H3.1, and H3.2 is unusually high in two-cell stage embryos and decreases as development proceeds. The transition toward pluripotency is accompanied by a decrease in histone mobility, and, upon lineage allocation, pluripotent cells retain higher mobility than the differentiated trophectoderm. Importantly, totipotent two-cell-like embryonic stem cells also display high core histone mobility, implying that reprogramming toward totipotency entails changes in chromatin mobility. Our data suggest that changes in chromatin dynamics underlie the transitions in cellular plasticity and that higher chromatin mobility is at the nuclear foundations of totipotency.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08909369
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genes and Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17240317a79a4889df18b5694f8bc1c3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.238881.114