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Replication Stress Impairs Chromosome Segregation and Preimplantation Development in Human Embryos

Authors :
Katherine L. Palmerola
Selma Amrane
Alejandro De Los Angeles
Shuangyi Xu
Ning Wang
Joao de Pinho
Michael V. Zuccaro
Angelo Taglialatela
Dashiell J. Massey
Jenna Turocy
Alex Robles
Anisa Subbiah
Bob Prosser
Rogerio Lobo
Alberto Ciccia
Amnon Koren
Timour Baslan
Dieter Egli
Source :
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey. 77:660-661
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

Human cleavage-stage embryos frequently acquire chromosomal aneuploidies during mitosis due to unknown mechanisms. Here, we show that S phase at the 1-cell stage shows replication fork stalling, low fork speed, and DNA synthesis extending into G2 phase. DNA damage foci consistent with collapsed replication forks, DSBs, and incomplete replication form in G2 in an ATR- and MRE11-dependent manner, followed by spontaneous chromosome breakage and segmental aneuploidies. Entry into mitosis with incomplete replication results in chromosome breakage, whole and segmental chromosome errors, micronucleation, chromosome fragmentation, and poor embryo quality. Sites of spontaneous chromosome breakage are concordant with sites of DNA synthesis in G2 phase, locating to gene-poor regions with long neural genes, which are transcriptionally silent at this stage of development. Thus, DNA replication stress in mammalian preimplantation embryos predisposes gene-poor regions to fragility, and in particular in the human embryo, to the formation of aneuploidies, impairing developmental potential.

Details

ISSN :
15339866 and 00297828
Volume :
77
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ffb1c5206c1cd3b3119f34067cc75b19
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/ogx.0000000000001098