Metabolic control of histone acetylation for precise and timely regulation of minor ZGA in early mammalian embryos

Jingyu Li(Wenzhou Medical University), Jiaming Zhang(Northeast Agricultural University), Weibo Hou(Northeast Agricultural University), Xu Yang(Wenzhou Medical University), Xiaoyu Liu(Tongji University), Yan Zhang(Wenzhou Medical University), Meiling Gao(Wenzhou Medical University), Ming Zong(Northeast Agricultural University), Zhixiong Dong(Wenzhou Medical University), Zhonghua Liu(Northeast Agricultural University), Jingling Shen(Wenzhou University), Weitao Cong(Wenzhou Medical University), Chunming Ding(Wenzhou Medical University), Shaorong Gao(Tongji University), Guoning Huang(Children's Hospital of Chongqing Medical University), Qingran Kong(Wenzhou Medical University)
Cell Discovery
September 27, 2022
Cited by 95Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Metabolism feeds into the regulation of epigenetics via metabolic enzymes and metabolites. However, metabolic features, and their impact on epigenetic remodeling during mammalian pre-implantation development, remain poorly understood. In this study, we established the metabolic landscape of mouse pre-implantation embryos from zygote to blastocyst, and quantified some absolute carbohydrate metabolites. We integrated these data with transcriptomic and proteomic data, and discovered the metabolic characteristics of the development process, including the activation of methionine cycle from 8-cell embryo to blastocyst, high glutaminolysis metabolism at blastocyst stage, enhanced TCA cycle activity from the 8-cell embryo stage, and active glycolysis in the blastocyst. We further demonstrated that oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD + ) synthesis is indispensable for mouse pre-implantation development. Mechanistically, in part, NAD + is required for the exit of minor zygotic gene activation (ZGA) by cooperating with SIRT1 to remove zygotic H3K27ac. In human, NAD + supplement can promote the removal of zygotic H3K27ac and benefit pre-implantation development. Our findings demonstrate that precise and timely regulation of minor ZGA is controlled by metabolic dynamics, and enhance our understanding of the metabolism of mammalian early embryos.


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