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Imprinted Gene mRNA Expression during Porcine Peri-implantation Development

Authors :
Byung-Hyun Cha
Hwan-Hoo Seong
Jae-Seok Woo
Jae-Hyeon Cho
Yeoung-Gyu Ko
Myung-Jick Kim
Byoung-Chul Yang
Gi-Sun Im
Bongki Kim
Mi-Rung Park
Seongsoo Hwang
Source :
Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences. 23:693-699
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Asian Australasian Association of Animal Production Societies, 2010.

Abstract

Imprinted genes are essential for fetal development, growth regulation, and postnatal behavior. However, little is known about imprinted genes in livestock. We hypothesized that certain putatively imprinted genes affected normal peri-implantation development such as embryo elongation, initial placental development, and preparation of implantation. The objective of the present study was to investigate the mRNA expression patterns of several putatively imprinted genes during the porcine peri-implantation stages from day 6 to day 21 of gestation. Imprinted genes were selected both maternally (Dlk1, IGF2, Ndn, and Sgce) and paternally (IGF2r, H19, Gnas and Xist). Here, we report that the maternally imprinted gene IGF2 was expressed from day 6 (Blastocyst stage), but Dlk1, Ndn, and Sgce were not expressed in this stage. These genes were first expressed between days 12 and day 14. All the maternally imprinted genes studied showed significantly high expression patterns from day 18 of embryo development. In contrast, paternally imprinted genes IGF2r, H19, Gnas, and Xist were first expressed from day 6 of embryo development (BL). Our data demonstrated that the expression of H19 and Gnas genes was significantly increased from day 14 of the embryo developmental stage, while IGF2r and Xist only showed high expression after day 21. This study is the first to show that the putatively imprinted genes were stage-specific during porcine embryonic development. These results demonstrate that the genes studied may exert important effects on embryo implantation and fetal development.

Details

ISSN :
19765517 and 10112367
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ade26cf4c24c590f6778256f126ddee8