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Exogenous paternal mitochondria rescue hybrid incompatibility and the destiny of exogenous mitochondria

Authors :
Ming Wen
Yuxin Zhang
Siyu Wang
Qian Li
Liangyue Peng
Qilin Li
Xinjiang Hu
Yuling Zhao
QinBo Qin
Min Tao
Chun Zhang
Kaikun Luo
Rurong Zhao
Shi Wang
Fangzhou Hu
Qingfeng Liu
Yude Wang
Chenchen Tang
Shaojun Liu
Source :
Reproduction and Breeding, Vol 2, Iss 3, Pp 83-88 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
KeAi Communications Co. Ltd., 2022.

Abstract

The mitochondria of most organisms follow strict maternal inheritance, and the mechanism of elimination of paternal mitochondria is unclear. Our previous studies showed that the paternal mtDNA presented in the embryo of hybrid Megalobrama Amblycephala (BSB,♀) ​× ​Carassius auratus red var(RCC,♂) (BR) and its reciprocal hybrid (RB), but its expression was quiescent. However, the microinjected mitochondria persisted in the embryo and its mtDNA expressed throughout embryonic development. In addition, the chromosome number of RCC (2n ​= ​100) is much larger than that of BSB (2n ​= ​48). All BR embryos were severely abnormal and ultimately died, while the RB embryos could survive and grow up into adult. It implied that the nuclear-cytoplasm incompatibility may be an important cause of BR abnormality. In this study, exogenous parental mitochondria were microinjected into BR embryos, and it was found that paternal mitochondrial DNA persisted and expressed throughout embryonic development. Meanwhile, the study also found that microinjection of isolated paternal (RCC) mitochondria into BR embryos significantly improved the degree of early embryonic abnormality with some fry swimming normally, comparing to the control embryos. However, injection of maternal (BSB) mitochondria did not improve the development of BR embryos. We safely concluded exogenous mitochondria escape the mechanism of elimination and its DNA persist and express throughout embryonic development. In addition, the expression of paternal mitochondrial genes largely reduces the cyto-nuclear conflict, so that the early BR embryos exhibit less degree of abnormality and enhanced activity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26670712
Volume :
2
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Reproduction and Breeding
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.53349c8a5aa04c1999da119380f3042c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.repbre.2022.06.003