Embryonic genome activation (EGA) is a highly complex phenomenon that is controlled at various levels. New studies have ascertained some molecular mechanisms that control EGA in several species; it is apparent that these same mechanisms regulate EGA in all species. Protein phosphorylation, DNA methylation and histone modification regulate transcriptional activities, and mechanisms such as ubiquitination, SUMOylation and microRNAs post-tran-scriptionally regulate development. Each of these regulations is highly dynamic in the early embryo. A better under-standing of these regulatory strategies can provide the possibility to improve the reproductive properties in mammals such as pigs, to develop methods of generating high-quality embryos in vitro, and to find markers for selecting de-velopmentally competent embryos.
Live offspring is obtained from in vitro production of porcine embryos, but the procedure is still associated with great inefficiencies. In mammalian oocytes, acquisition of meiotic competence coincides with a decrease in general transcriptional activity at the end of the oocyte growth phase. In this study, we investigated the expression and sub-cellular localization of positive transcription elongation factor P-TEFb (CDK9/Cyclin T1), a RNA polymerase II CTD kinase during pig oocyte growth and early embryonic development. Localization and expression of components involved in mRNA and rRNA transcription were assessed by immunocytochemistry in growing and fully-grown oocytes. In addition, meiotic resumption, germinal vesicle breakdown, nuclear transcription and embryonic genome activation (EGA) were analyzed in oocytes and embryos cultured in presence of a potent CDK9 inhibitor, flavopiridol. Our analyses, demonstrated that CDK9 became co- localized partially with phosphorylated Pol II CTD and mRNA splicing complexes. Surprisingly, CDK9 was co-localized with Pol I-specific transcription factor, UBF, and gradually localized in nucleolar peripheries at the final steps of oocyte growth. Later, CDK9 became associated with nucleolar structures at 4-cell stage. Treatment with flavopiridol resulted in arrest in meiotic resumption, germinal vesicle breakdown as well as a decline in global transcription. Flavopiridol also inhibited embryo development beyond EGA. All together, these data suggest that CDK9 has a dual role in both Pol I- and Pol II-dependent transcription in pig oocyte growth and embryonic development.