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    Date Issued2018 (4)Author
    Conine, Colin C (4)
    Rando, Oliver J. (4)Chan, Io Long (2)Rivera-Perez, Jaime A. (2)Sun, Fengyun (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (4)Department of Pediatrics, Division of Genes and Development (2)Rivera Lab (2)UMass Metabolic Network (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)Preprint (2)KeywordDevelopmental Biology (4)Biochemical Phenomena, Metabolism, and Nutrition (1)C. elegans (1)Cell Biology (1)Cellular and Molecular Physiology (1)View MoreJournalbioRxiv (2)Developmental cell (1)G3 (Bethesda, Md.) (1)

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    Small RNAs Gained during Epididymal Transit of Sperm Are Essential for Embryonic Development in Mice

    Conine, Colin C; Sun, Fengyun; Song, Lina; Rivera-Perez, Jaime A.; Rando, Oliver J. (2018-08-20)
    The small RNA payload of mammalian sperm undergoes dramatic remodeling during development, as several waves of microRNAs and tRNA fragments are shipped to sperm during post-testicular maturation in the epididymis. Here, we take advantage of this developmental process to probe the function of the sperm RNA payload in preimplantation development. We generated zygotes via intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) using sperm obtained from the proximal (caput) versus distal (cauda) epididymis and then characterized the development of the resulting embryos. Embryos generated using caput sperm significantly overexpress multiple regulatory factors throughout preimplantation development, subsequently implant inefficiently, and fail soon after implantation. Remarkably, microinjection of purified cauda-specific small RNAs into caput-derived embryos not only completely rescued preimplantation molecular defects but also suppressed the post-implantation embryonic lethality phenotype. These findings reveal an essential role for small RNA remodeling during post-testicular maturation of mammalian sperm and identify a specific preimplantation gene expression program responsive to sperm-delivered microRNAs.
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    Small RNAs gained during epididymal transit of sperm are essential for embryonic development in mice [preprint]

    Conine, Colin C; Sun, Fengyun; Rivera-Perez, Jaime A.; Rando, Oliver J. (2018-04-30)
    The small RNA payload of mammalian sperm undergoes dramatic remodeling during development, as several waves of microRNAs and tRNA fragments are shipped to sperm during post-testicular maturation in the epididymis. Here, we take advantage of this developmental process to probe the function of the sperm RNA payload in preimplantation development. We generated zygotes via intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) using sperm obtained from the proximal (caput) vs. distal (cauda) epididymis, then characterized development of the resulting embryos. Embryos generated using caput sperm significantly overexpress multiple regulatory factors throughout preimplantation development, and subsequently implant inefficiently and fail soon after implantation. Remarkably, microinjection of purified cauda-specific small RNAs into caput-derived embryos not only completely rescued preimplantation molecular defects, but also suppressed the postimplantation embryonic lethality phenotype. These findings reveal an essential role for small RNA remodeling during post-testicular maturation of mammalian sperm, and identify a specific preimplantation gene expression program responsive to sperm-delivered microRNAs.
    Thumbnail

    Effects of Larval Density on Gene Regulation in Caenorhabditis elegans During Routine L1 Synchronization

    Chan, Io Long; Rando, Oliver J.; Conine, Colin C (2018-03-30)
    Bleaching gravid C. elegans followed by a short period of starvation of the L1 larvae is a routine method performed by worm researchers for generating synchronous populations for experiments. During the process of investigating dietary effects on gene regulation in L1 stage worms by single-worm RNA-Seq, we found that the density of resuspended L1 larvae affects expression of many mRNAs. Specifically, a number of genes related to metabolism and signalling are highly expressed in worms arrested at low density, but are repressed at higher arrest densities. We generated a GFP reporter strain based on one of the most density-dependent genes in our dataset - lips-15 - and confirmed that this reporter was expressed specifically in worms arrested at relatively low density. Finally, we show that conditioned media from high density L1 cultures was able to downregulate lips-15 even in L1 animals arrested at low density, and experiments using daf-22 mutant animals demonstrated that this effect is not mediated by the ascaroside family of signalling pheromones. Together, our data implicate a soluble signalling molecule in density sensing by L1 stage C. elegans, and provide guidance for design of experiments focused on early developmental gene regulation.
    Thumbnail

    Effects of larval density on gene regulation in C. elegans during routine L1 synchronization [preprint]

    Rando, Oliver J.; Chan, Io Long; Conine, Colin C (2018-03-19)
    Bleaching gravid C. elegans followed by a short period of starvation of the L1 larvae is a routine method performed by worm researchers for generating synchronous populations for experiments. During the process of investigating dietary effects on gene regulation in L1 stage worms by single-worm RNA-Seq, we found that the density of resuspended L1 larvae affects expression of many mRNAs. Specifically, a number of genes related to metabolism and signalling are highly expressed in worms arrested at low density, but are repressed at higher arrest densities. We generated a GFP reporter strain based on one of the most density-dependent genes in our dataset – lips-15 – and confirmed that this reporter was expressed specifically in worms arrested at relatively low density. Finally, we show that conditioned media from high density L1 cultures was able to downregulate lips-15 even in L1 animals arrested at low density, and experiments using the daf-22 mutant demonstrated that this effect is not mediated by the ascaroside family of signalling pheromones. Together, our data implicate a soluble signalling molecule in density sensing by L1 stage C. elegans, and provide guidance for design of experiments focused on early developmental gene regulation.
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