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Dnmt1s in donor cells is a barrier to SCNT-mediated DNA methylation reprogramming in pigs.

Oncotarget 2017 May 24
Low development of somatic cell nuclear transfer embryos could be due to the incomplete DNA methylation reprogramming, and Dnmt1s existing in donor cells may be one cause of this disrupted DNA methylation reprogramming. However, the reprogramming pattern of Dnmt1s and its effect on DNA methylation reprogramming in cloned embryos remain poorly understood. Here, we displayed that along with the significantly higher Dnmt1 expression at the zygotic gene activation stage of cloned embryos, genomic methylation level was markedly upregulated, and the arrested rate was significantly higher compared with their in vitro fertilization counterparts. Then, we demonstrated that Dnmt1s, not Dnmt1o, methylation and expression levels in cloned embryos were significantly higher from the 1-cell to 4-cell stage but markedly lower at the blastocyst stage. When Dnmt1s in donor cells was appropriately removed, more cloned embryos passed through the zygotic gene activation stage and the blastocyst rate significantly increased. Furthermore, Dnmt1s knockdown significantly improved itself and genomic methylation reconstruction in cloned embryos. Finally, we found that Dnmt1s removal significantly promoted the demethylation and expression of pluripotent genes in cloned embryos. Taken together, these data suggest that Dnmt1s in donor cells is a critical barrier to somatic cell nuclear transfer mediated DNA methylation reprogramming, impairing the development of cloned embryos.

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