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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Transcriptomic behavior of genes associated with chromosome 21 aneuploidies in early embryo development.

Amparo MercaderPatricia Sebastian-leonFrancisco DomínguezPatricia Diaz-gimenoAlicia QuiñoneroAgustín BallesterosImma Sanchez-ribasAntonio PellicerAntonio Pellicer

subject

0301 basic medicineAdultDown syndromeReproductive Techniques AssistedChromosomes Human Pair 21Embryonic DevelopmentBiologyTranscriptomeAndrologyEmbryo Culture Techniques03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMonosomyPregnancymedicineHumansBlastocystProspective StudiesGenetic Association Studies030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicineObstetrics and GynecologyEmbryomedicine.diseaseAneuploidy030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive Medicineembryonic structuresFemalePloidyTrisomyChromosome 21TranscriptomeComparative genomic hybridization

description

To analyze how chromosome 21 (HSA21) ploidy affects global gene expression of early human blastocysts.Prospective study.University-affiliated in vitro fertilization clinic.A total of 26 high-quality donated embryos from in vitro fertilization (IVF) patients: trisomy 21 (n = 8), monosomy 21 (n = 10), and euploid (n = 8) blastocysts.None.Blastocyst transcriptome changes and its associated functions.Trisomy 21, monosomy 21, and euploid blastocysts were classified by comparative genomic hybridization. The global transcriptome of whole blastocysts was analyzed with small cell number RNA sequencing, and they were compared to understand the gene expression behavior at early development and its implications for embryo implantation. We identified 1,232 differentially expressed genes (false discovery rate0.05) in monosomy 21 compared with euploid blastocysts associated with dysregulated functions in embryo development as the Rap1 signaling pathway. Curiously, Down syndrome in early development revealed fewer transcriptomic changes than expected. In addition, Down syndrome gene expression in neonates, children, and adults revealed that the number of deregulated genes increases across life stages from blastocysts to adults, suggesting a potential dosage-compensation mechanism for human chromosome 21.At the transcriptomic level, early development in Down syndrome is mainly dosage compensated. However, monosomy 21 is strongly transcriptionally affected because early development involving main functions is associated with embryo implantation.

10.1016/j.fertnstert.2019.01.023https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31029242