John Huntriss
University of Leeds
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by John Huntriss.
Stem Cells | 2005
James Adjaye; John Huntriss; Ralf Herwig; Alia BenKahla; Thore C. Brink; Christoph Wierling; Claus Hultschig; Detlef Groth; Marie-Laure Yaspo; Helen M. Picton; Roger G. Gosden; Hans Lehrach
The primary differentiation event during mammalian development occurs at the blastocyst stage and leads to the delineation of the inner cell mass (ICM) and the trophectoderm (TE). We provide the first global mRNA expression data from immunosurgically dissected ICM cells, TE cells, and intact human blastocysts. Using a cDNA microarray composed of 15,529 cDNAs from known and novel genes, we identify marker transcripts specific to the ICM (e.g., OCT4/POU5F1, NANOG, HMGB1, and DPPA5) and TE (e.g., CDX2, ATP1B3, SFN, and IPL), in addition to novel ICM‐ and TE‐specific expressed sequence tags. The expression patterns suggest that the emergence of pluripotent ICM and TE cell lineages from the morula is controlled by metabolic and signaling pathways, which include inter alia, WNT, mitogen‐activated protein kinase, transforming growth factor‐beta, NOTCH, integrin‐mediated cell adhesion, phosphatidylinositol 3‐kinase, and apoptosis. These data enhance our understanding of the first step in human cellular differentiation and, hence, the derivation of both embryonic stem cells and trophoblastic stem cells from these lineages.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011
David A. Parry; Clare V. Logan; Bruce E. Hayward; Michael Shires; Hanène Landolsi; Christine P. Diggle; Ian M. Carr; Cécile Rittore; Isabelle Touitou; Laurent Philibert; Rosemary A. Fisher; Masoumeh Fallahian; John Huntriss; Helen M. Picton; Saghira Malik; Graham R. Taylor; Colin A. Johnson; David T. Bonthron; Eamonn Sheridan
Familial biparental hydatidiform mole (FBHM) is the only known pure maternal-effect recessive inherited disorder in humans. Affected women, although developmentally normal themselves, suffer repeated pregnancy loss because of the development of the conceptus into a complete hydatidiform mole in which extraembryonic trophoblastic tissue develops but the embryo itself suffers early demise. This developmental phenotype results from a genome-wide failure to correctly specify or maintain a maternal epigenotype at imprinted loci. Most cases of FBHM result from mutations of NLRP7, but genetic heterogeneity has been demonstrated. Here, we report biallelic mutations of C6orf221 in three families with FBHM. The previously described biological properties of their respective gene families suggest that NLRP7 and C6orf221 may interact as components of an oocyte complex that is directly or indirectly required for determination of epigenetic status on the oocyte genome.
BMC Genetics | 2003
Bruce E. Hayward; M. De Vos; H Judson; D Hodge; John Huntriss; Helen M. Picton; Eamonn Sheridan; David T. Bonthron
BackgroundDifferential methylation of the two alleles is a hallmark of imprinted genes. Correspondingly, loss of DNA methyltransferase function results in aberrant imprinting and abnormal post-fertilization development. In the mouse, mutations of the oocyte-specific isoform of the DNA methyltransferase Dnmt1 (Dnmt1o) and of the methyltransferase-like Dnmt3L gene result in specific failures of imprint establishment or maintenance, at multiple loci. We have previously shown in humans that an analogous inherited failure to establish imprinting at multiple loci in the female germline underlies a rare phenotype of recurrent hydatidiform mole.ResultsWe have identified a human homologue of the murine Dnmt1o and assessed its pattern of expression. Human DNMT1o mRNA is detectable in mature oocytes and early fertilized embryos but not in any somatic tissues analysed. The somatic isoform of DNMT1 mRNA, in contrast, is not detectable in human oocytes. In the previously-described family with multi-locus imprinting failure, mutation of DNMT1o and of the other known members of this gene family has been excluded.ConclusionsMutation of the known DNMT genes does not underlie familial hydatidiform mole, at least in the family under study. This suggests that trans-acting factors other than the known methyltransferases are required for imprint establishment in humans, a concept that has indirect support from recent biochemical studies of DNMT3L.
Molecular Human Reproduction | 2013
Matthew Cotterill; Sarah E. Harris; Esther Collado Fernandez; Jianping Lu; John Huntriss; B. K. Campbell; Helen M. Picton
Mitochondria are responsible for the production of ATP, which drives cellular metabolic and biosynthetic processes. This is the first study to quantify the mtDNA copy number across all stages of oogenesis in a large monovulatory species, it includes assessment of the activity of mitochondria in germinal vesicle (GV) and metaphase II (MII) oocytes through JC1 staining. Primordial to early antral follicles (n = 249) were isolated from the sheep ovarian cortex following digestion at 37°C for 1 h and all oocytes were disaggregated from their somatic cells. Germinal vesicle oocytes (n = 133) were aspirated from 3- to 5-mm diameter antral follicles, and mature MII oocytes (n = 71) were generated following in vitro maturation (IVM). The mtDNA copy number in each oocyte was quantified using real-time PCR and showed a progressive, but variable increase in the amount of mtDNA in oocytes from primordial follicles (605 ± 205, n = 8) to mature MII oocytes (744 633 ± 115 799, n = 13; P < 0.05). Mitochondrial activity (P > 0.05) was not altered during meiotic progression from GV to MII during IVM. The observed increase in the mtDNA copy number across oogenesis reflects the changing ATP demands needed to orchestrate cytoskeletal and cytoplasmic reorganization during oocyte growth and maturation and the need to fuel the resumption of meiosis in mature oocytes following the pre-ovulatory gonadotrophin surge.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 1998
John Huntriss; Robert Daniels; Virginia N. Bolton; Marilyn Monk
Summary Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and Angelman syndrome (AS) are two clinically distinct neurogenetic disorders arising from a loss of expression of imprinted genes within the human chromosome region 15q11-q13. Recent evidence suggests that the SNRPN gene, which is defective in PWS, plays a central role in the imprinting-center regulation of the PWS/AS region. To increase our understanding of the regulation of expression of this imprinted gene, we have developed single-cell–sensitive procedures for the analysis of expression of the SNRPN gene during early human development. Transcripts of SNRPN were detected in human oocytes and at all stages of preimplantation development analyzed. Using embryos heterozygous for a polymorphism within the SNRPN gene, we showed that monoallelic expression from the paternal allele occurs by the 4-cell stage. Thus, the imprinting epigenetic information inherited in the gametes is recognized already in the preimplantation embryo. The demonstration of monoallelic expression in embryos means that efficient preimplantation diagnosis of PWS may be made by analysis for the presence or absence of SNRPN mRNA.
Human Fertility | 2008
John Huntriss; Helen M. Picton
Epigenetic information, which is essential for normal mammalian development, is acquired during gametogenesis and further regulated during preimplantation development. The epigenetic consequences of assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) and infertility on the health and quality of the human preimplantation embryo are considered in this review. In the zygote, the epigenetic information that is inherited from the sperm and the oocyte intersects and must be appropriately recognized, regulated and then propagated during preimplantation development so as to regulate gene expression in an appropriate manner. A growing body of evidence suggests that ARTs and/or infertility itself may affect these complex processes leading to epigenetic diseases that include disorders of genomic imprinting. The epigenetic safety of human gametes and embryos is of paramount importance. Unfortunately, morphological methods of assessing embryo quality are incapable of detecting epigenetic errors. Further research is therefore critical to resolve these issues.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2013
John Huntriss; Karen E. Hemmings; Matthew Hinkins; Anthony Rutherford; Roger G Sturmey; Kay Elder; Helen M. Picton
There is evidence that expression and methylation of the imprinted paternally expressed gene 1/mesoderm-specific transcript homologue (PEG1/MEST) gene may be affected by assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) and infertility. In this study, we sought to assess the imprinting status of the MEST gene in a large cohort of in vitro-derived human preimplantation embryos, in order to characterise potentially adverse effects of ART and infertility on this locus in early human development. Embryonic genomic DNA from morula or blastocyst stage embryos was screened for a transcribed AflIII polymorphism in MEST and imprinting analysis was then performed in cDNA libraries derived from these embryos. In 10 heterozygous embryos, MEST expression was monoallelic in seven embryos, predominantly monoallelic in two embryos, and biallelic in one embryo. Screening of cDNA derived from 61 additional human preimplantation embryos, for which DNA for genotyping was unavailable, identified eight embryos with expression originating from both alleles (biallelic or predominantly monoallelic). In some embryos, therefore, the onset of imprinted MEST expression occurs during late preimplantation development. Variability in MEST imprinting was observed in both in vitro fertilization and intracytoplasmic sperm injection-derived embryos. Biallelic or predominantly monoallelic MEST expression was not associated with any one cause of infertility. Characterisation of the main MEST isoforms revealed that isoform 2 was detected in early development and was itself variably imprinted between embryos. To our knowledge, this report constitutes the largest expression study to date of genomic imprinting in human preimplantation embryos and reveals that for some imprinted genes, contrasting imprinting states exist between embryos.
Fertility and Sterility | 2011
John Huntriss; Kathryn Woodfine; Joanna E. Huddleston; Adele Murrell; Anthony Rutherford; Kay Elder; Amir Ali Khan; Karen E. Hemmings; Helen M. Picton
We report the first quantitative assessment of DNA methylation for any gene in the human preimplantation embryo to reveal that imprints exist at KvDMR1, RB1, SNRPN, and GRB10 in the human blastocyst. For comparison, in two human embryonic stem cell lines, imprints were also observed at KvDMR1, SNRPN, GRB10, and other imprinted loci, whereas RB1 and MEG3 were hypermethylated.
Current Stem Cell Research & Therapy | 2008
John Huntriss; Helen M. Picton
Imprinted genes are expressed predominantly or exclusively from one allele only. This mode of gene expression makes the regulation of imprinted genes susceptible to epigenetic insults, which may in turn lead to disease. There is compelling experimental evidence that certain aspects of assisted reproductive technology (ART) such as in vitro cell culture may have adverse effects on the regulation of epigenetic information in mammalian embryos, including the disruption of imprinted genes and epigenetic regulators. Moreover, in humans, disorders of genomic imprinting have been reported in children conceived by ART. The derivation and in vitro culture of embryonic stem (ES) cells are potential points of origin for epigenetic abnormalities. There is evidence that defects of genomic imprinting occur in mouse embryonic stem cells, with similar data now emerging in related studies in non-human primate and human ES cells. It is therefore pertinent to rigorously assess the epigenetic status of all stem cells and their derivatives prior to their therapeutic use in humans. Focusing on the stability of genomic imprinting, this review discusses the current evidence for epigenetic disruption in mammalian embryonic stem cells in light of the epigenetic disruption observed in ART-derived mammalian embryos.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015
John Huntriss; Kathryn Woodfine; Joanna E. Huddleston; Adele Murrell; Helen M. Picton
Extensive epigenetic reprogramming occurs during mammalian gametogenesis and preimplantation development. DNA methylation patterns that are laid down during these stages are essential for subsequent normal foetal development. The requirement for more precise assessment of the epigenetic programming of in vitro-derived human preimplantation embryo has become of paramount importance following the identification of epigenetic diseases that are associated with assisted reproduction and/or infertility. Such techniques are also useful and applicable to experimental reproductive biology. In order to expand our knowledge of epigenetic marks, including DNA methylation, during mammalian reproduction and early development, it is necessary to test new and sufficiently sensitive protocols. There are, however, unique challenges to obtain DNA methylation data from the small cell numbers that are present in the preimplantation embryo. In this protocol, we describe the successful application of Pyrosequencing(®) to yield quantitative DNA methylation data over several CpG sites at differentially methylated regions (DMRs) at imprinted loci in single blastocysts, in this case, human blastocysts. Future developments of the protocol will allow DNA methylation analysis of a more extensive panel of genes for each embryo and at the same time, since the protocol allows for the extraction of mRNA from the embryo, the comparison between DNA methylation and gene expression.