Purpose: To investigate whether inhibition of LINE-1 affects telomere reprogramming during 2-cell embryo development.
Methods: Mouse zygotes were cultured with or without 1 µM azidothymidine (AZT) for up to 15 h (early 2-cell, G1/S) or 24 h (late 2-cell, S/G2). Gene expression and DNA copy number were determined by RT-qPCR and qPCR respectively. Immunostaining and telomeric PNA-FISH were performed for co-localization between telomeres and ZSCAN4 or LINE-1-Orf1p.
Results: LINE-1 copy number was remarkably reduced in later 2-cell embryos by exposure to 1 µM AZT, and telomere lengths in late 2-cell embryos with AZT were significantly shorter compared to control embryos (P = 0.0002). Additionally, in the absence of LINE-1 inhibition, Dux, Zscan4, and LINE-1 were highly transcribed in early 2-cell embryos, as compared to late 2-cell embryos (P < 0.0001), suggesting that these 2-cell genes are activated at the early 2-cell stage. However, in early 2-cell embryos with AZT treatment, mRNA levels of Dux, Zscan4, and LINE-1 were significantly decreased. Furthermore, both Zscan4 and LINE-1 encoded proteins localized to telomere regions in 2-cell embryos, but this co-localization was dramatically reduced after AZT treatment (P < 0.001).
Conclusions: Upon inhibition of LINE-1 retrotransposition in mouse 2-cell embryos, Dux, Zscan4, and LINE-1 were significantly downregulated, and telomere elongation was blocked. ZSCAN4 foci and their co-localization with telomeres were also significantly decreased, indicating that ZSCAN4 is an essential component of the telomere reprogramming that occurs in mice at the 2-cell stage. Our findings also suggest that LINE-1 may directly contribute to telomere reprogramming in addition to regulating gene expression.
Keywords: Dux; Long Interspersed Nuclear Element-1 (LINE-1); Mouse embryo; Retrotransposition; Telomere; Telomere length; Zscan4.
© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.