Communities & Collections
Researchers & Labs
Titles
DGIST
LIBRARY
DGIST R&D
Detail View
Department of New Biology
Laboratory of Single-Cell Genomics
1. Journal Articles
Stella modulates transcriptional and endogenous retrovirus programs during maternal-to-zygotic transition
Huang, Yun
;
Kim, Jong Kyoung
;
Dang Vinh Do
;
Lee, Caroline
;
Penfold, Christopher A.
;
Zylicz, Jan J.
;
Marioni, John C.
;
Hackett, Jamie A.
;
Surani, M. Azim
Department of New Biology
Laboratory of Single-Cell Genomics
1. Journal Articles
Citations
WEB OF SCIENCE
Citations
SCOPUS
Metadata Downloads
XML
Excel
Title
Stella modulates transcriptional and endogenous retrovirus programs during maternal-to-zygotic transition
Issued Date
2017-03
Citation
eLife, v.6
Type
Article
Keywords
Differential Expression
;
DNA Methylation
;
Early Mouse Development
;
Gene Expression
;
Host Genes
;
Human Preimplantation Embryos
;
RNA Seq Experiments
;
Single Cell
;
Stem Cells
;
Transposable Elements
ISSN
2050-084X
Abstract
The maternal-to-zygotic transition (MZT) marks the period when the embryonic genome is activated and acquires control of development. Maternally inherited factors play a key role in this critical developmental process, which occurs at the 2-cell stage in mice. We investigated the function of the maternally inherited factor Stella (encoded by Dppa3) using single-cell/embryo approaches. We show that loss of maternal Stella results in widespread transcriptional misregulation and a partial failure of MZT. Strikingly, activation of endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) is significantly impaired in Stella maternal/zygotic knockout embryos, which in turn leads to a failure to upregulate chimeric transcripts. Amongst ERVs, MuERV-L activation is particularly affected by the absence of Stella, and direct in vivo knockdown of MuERV-L impacts the developmental potential of the embryo. We propose that Stella is involved in ensuring activation of ERVs, which themselves play a potentially key role during early development, either directly or through influencing embryonic gene expression. © Huang et al.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/4214
DOI
10.7554/eLife.22345
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications
Show Full Item Record
File Downloads
There are no files associated with this item.
공유
공유하기
Total Views & Downloads