Reproduction, fertility, and development | 2021

Embryo structure reorganisation reduces the probability of apoptosis in preimplantation mouse embryos.

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Programmed cell death plays a key role in mammalian development because the morphological events of an organism s formation are dependent on apoptosis. In the mouse development, the first apoptotic waves occur physiologically at the blastocyst stage. Cell number and the mean nucleus to cytoplasm (N/C) ratio increase exponentially throughout subsequent embryo cleavages, while cell volume concurrently decreases from the zygote to blastocyst stage. In this study we tested the hypothesis that reorganisation of the embryo structure by manipulating cell number, the N/C ratio and the cell volume of 2-cell embryos may result in the earlier and more frequent occurrence of apoptosis. The results indicate that doubling ( Aggregates group) or halving ( Embryos 1/2 group) the initial cell number and modifying embryo volume, ploidy ( Embryos 4n group) and the N/C ratio ( Embryos 2/1 group) reduce the probability of apoptosis in the resulting embryos. There was a higher probability of apoptosis in the inner cell mass of the blastocyst, but apoptotic cells were never observed at the morula stage in any of the experimental groups. Thus, manipulation of cell number, embryo volume, the N/C ratio and ploidy cause subtle changes in the occurrence of apoptosis, although these are mostly dependent on embryo stage and cell lineage (trophectoderm or inner cell mass), which have the greatest effect on the probability of apoptosis.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1071/RD21074
Language English
Journal Reproduction, fertility, and development

Full Text