An understanding of oocyte gene expression is a necessary for the study of biological development. Recently, Oocyte has been used in many techniques such as somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) and embryonic stem cell derivation. However, the molecular mechanism underlying porcine oocyte is still unclear. In this study, we present the description of the porcine oocyte proteome. Proteins within the isoelectric point ranges of 3.0 to 10.0 were analyzed separately using 2‐dimensional electrophoresis (2‐DE). About 450 spots were detected in 2‐ D gel of oocytes, stained with Coomassie blue. Subsequent excision of 227 spots from gels and MALDI‐TOF MS analysis allowed the identification of 85 proteins. Our results indicated the composite profiles of proteins in the porcine oocyte. Tubulin beta chain and meiosis‐specific nuclear structural protein 1 antibody was used to confirm those antibody expression levels in immature, mature and parthenogenetic embryo. Western blot analysis showed that expressions of those proteins increased during mature and parthenogenetic embryo. These protein profiles will make available important guides for the study of oocyte function and assist in functional analysis of the proteins.
5‐aza‐2’‐deoxyctidine (5‐aza‐dC) is DNA methylation inhibitor and Trichostatin A (TSA) is histone deacytlase inhibitor, both of them can alter the level of the epigenetic modification of cells. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of treatment with 5‐aza‐dC and TSA into fetal fibroblasts on the development of porcine nuclear transfer (NT) embryos. In this study, experiments were performed in order to modify epigenetic status in donor cells and evaluate developmental potential of NT embryos. 5‐ aza‐dC or TSA or combining treatment of TSA and 5‐aza‐dC was treated into growing donor cells for 1 h exposure and development of NT embryos was evaluated. Experiment was performed with 3 groups: control group (donor cells without treatment); TSA group (donor cell treated with 50 nM TSA for 1 h); TSA + 5‐aza‐dC group (donor cells were treated with 50 nM TSA and 5 nM 5‐aza‐dC for 1 h); TSA+1/2(5‐aza‐dC) group (donor cells were treated with 50 nM TSA for 1h and subsequently treated with 2.5 nM 5‐aza‐dC for another 1h). When donor cells were individually treated with 5 nM 5‐aza‐dC or 50 nM TSA for 1h, the blastocyst rate of NT embryos increased significantly compared with control group [18.8% vs 13.4% (5 nM 5‐aza‐dC group vs control group), and 26.2% vs 11.8% (50 nM TSA group vs control group), p<0.05]. However, the blastocyst rate in combining treatment group (50 nM TSA + 5 nM 5‐aza‐dC) did not increase compare with control group (12.3% vs 11.8%, p>0.05). When the donor cell were individually treated with 50nM TSA for 1 h firstly and then treated with 2.5 nM 5‐aza‐dC for another 1h, the blastocyst rate was significantly improved compared with control and TSA group (28% vs 10.2% and 23.7%, p<0.05). The present study suggested that donor cells treated with TSA or low concentration of TSA+5‐azadC in short time exposure may enhance the development of porcine NT embryo.
X‐box binding protein‐1 (XBP‐1) is an important regulator of a subset of genes active during endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. In the present study, we analyzed XBP‐1 level and location to explore the effect of ER stress on oocyte maturation and developmental competency of porcine embryos in an in vitro culture system. First, we examined the localization of XBP‐1 at different meiotic stages of porcine oocytes and at early stages of parthenogenetic embryo development. Fluorescence staining showed that expression of functional XBP‐1 was weak in mature oocytes and at the one‐cell, two‐cell, and eight‐cell stages of embryos, but abundant at the GV oocyte, four‐cell, morula, and blastocyst stages. In addition, RT‐PCR revealed that both spliced XBP‐1 (XBP‐1s ) and unspliced XBP‐1 (XBP‐1u) were expressed at the GV oocyte, four‐cell, morula, and blastocyst stages. Tunicamycin (TM), an ER stress inducer, blocked porcine embryonic development at the four‐cell stage, exhibiting the effect on embryonic genome activation. Next, porcine embryos cultured in the presence of tauroursodeoxycholate (TUDCA), an ER stress inhibitor, were studied. Total cell numbers and the extent of the ICM increased (p<0.05), whereas the rate of nuclear apoptosis decreased (p<0.05). Moreover, expression of the anti‐apoptotic gene Bcl‐2 increased whereas expression of the pro‐apoptotic genes Bcl‐xl and p53 decreased. The results indicated that inhibition of ER stress enhanced porcine oocyte maturation and embryonic development by preventing ER stress‐mediated apoptosis in vitro.
The pig has been considered to serve as an appropriate model of human disease. Therefore, establishment of porcine embryonic stem cell lines is important. The purpose of the present study was to further work in this direction. We produced porcine parthenogenetic embryos, and separately aggregated two of each of two-cell (2×2), four-cell (2×4), and eight-cell (2×8) embryos derived by parthenogenesis. After culture for 4 days, the developmental ability of the aggregates and total blastocyst cell numbers were evaluated. The percentage of blastocysts was significantly higher in both 2×4- and 2×8-aggregated embryos (58.3±1.9% and 37.2±2.8%, respectively) than in the control or 2×2-aggregated embryos (23.6±1.1% and 12.5±2.4%, respectively). Total blastocyst cell numbers were increased in the 2×4- and 2×8-aggregated embryos (by 44±3.0% and 45±3.3%, respectively) compared with those of control or 2×2-aggregated embryos (30.5±2.1% and 30.7±2.6%, respectively; p<0.05). The levels of mRNA encoding Oct-4 were higher in both the 2×4- and 2×8-aggregated embryos than in the control. When blastocysts derived from 2×4- aggregated embryos or intact normal embryos were cultured on mouse embryonic fibroblast feeder cells to obtain porcine stem cells, blastocysts from aggregated embryos formed colonies that were better in shape compared with those derived from intact blastocysts. Together, the data show that aggregation of porcine embryos not only improves blastocyst quality but also serves as an efficient procedure by which porcine embryonic stem cells can become established.