Cell Reports (May 2012)

Rapid Mitochondrial DNA Segregation in Primate Preimplantation Embryos Precedes Somatic and Germline Bottleneck

  • Hyo-Sang Lee,
  • Hong Ma,
  • Rita Cervera Juanes,
  • Masahito Tachibana,
  • Michelle Sparman,
  • Joy Woodward,
  • Cathy Ramsey,
  • Jing Xu,
  • Eun-Ju Kang,
  • Paula Amato,
  • Georg Mair,
  • Ralf Steinborn,
  • Shoukhrat Mitalipov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2012.03.011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 5
pp. 506 – 515

Abstract

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The timing and mechanisms of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) segregation and transmission in mammals are poorly understood. Genetic bottleneck in female germ cells has been proposed as the main phenomenon responsible for rapid intergenerational segregation of heteroplasmic mtDNA. We demonstrate here that mtDNA segregation occurs during primate preimplantation embryogenesis resulting in partitioning of mtDNA variants between daughter blastomeres. A substantial shift toward homoplasmy occurred in fetuses and embryonic stem cells (ESCs) derived from these heteroplasmic embryos. We also observed a wide range of heteroplasmic mtDNA variants distributed in individual oocytes recovered from these fetuses. Thus, we present here evidence for a previously unknown mtDNA segregation and bottleneck during preimplantation embryo development, suggesting that return to the homoplasmic condition can occur during development of an individual organism from the zygote to birth, without a passage through the germline.