Sex chromosomes shape the transcriptional landscape of the preimplantation mouse embryo
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Abstract
Sex chromosomes are emerging as key regulators of adult health and disease in males (XY) and females (XX), but their impact on embryo development is poorly understood. Using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) on wild type and aneuploid mouse embryos, we show that sex chromosomes significantly shape the preimplantation embryo transcriptional landscape. A hierarchy of effects are identified, distinctly mediated by the Y chromosome, the dosage of X chromosomes, X-chromosome imprinting, and by Xist , the non-coding RNA that initiates X-inactivation. The sex chromosomes have strong trans effects on autosomal gene expression throughout preimplantation development. The Y chromosome has an unexpectedly pronounced impact on the trophectoderm, the precursor of the placenta, and this property is shared with genes expressed from the inactive X chromosome. The paternal and maternal X chromosomes differentially promote preimplantation growth, and we identify multiple novel candidate X-linked imprinted genes mediating this effect. Our findings show that sex chromosomes impact the embryo from the beginning of life, long before the appearance of overt sex differences.
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Excerpt
WHO – The X and Y. WHEN – Since the beginning. HOW - From a distance
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