Unique insights into maternal mitochondrial inheritance in mice
Male
Mice, Knockout
0301 basic medicine
Mice, Inbred BALB C
Microscopy, Confocal
Base Sequence
Molecular Sequence Data
Inheritance Patterns
Mice, Transgenic
Embryo, Mammalian
DNA, Mitochondrial
Mitochondria
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Luminescent Proteins
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
Genes, Mitochondrial
Autophagy
Animals
Female
Lysosomes
Microtubule-Associated Proteins
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.1303231110
Publication Date:
2013-07-23T03:53:19Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
In animals, mtDNA is always transmitted through the female and this is termed “maternal inheritance.” Recently, autophagy was reported to be involved in maternal inheritance by elimination of paternal mitochondria and mtDNA in
Caenorhabditis elegans
; moreover, by immunofluorescence, P62 and LC3 proteins were also found to colocalize to sperm mitochondria after fertilization in mice. Thus, it has been speculated that autophagy may be an evolutionary conserved mechanism for paternal mitochondrial elimination. However, by using two transgenic mouse strains, one bearing GFP-labeled autophagosomes and the other bearing red fluorescent protein-labeled mitochondria, we demonstrated that autophagy did not participate in the postfertilization elimination of sperm mitochondria in mice. Although P62 and LC3 proteins congregated to sperm mitochondria immediately after fertilization, sperm mitochondria were not engulfed and ultimately degraded in lysosomes until P62 and LC3 proteins disengaged from sperm mitochondria. Instead, sperm mitochondria unevenly distributed in blastomeres during cleavage and persisted in several cells until the morula stages. Furthermore, by using single sperm mtDNA PCR, we observed that most motile sperm that had reached the oviduct for fertilization had eliminated their mtDNA, leaving only vacuolar mitochondria. However, if sperm with remaining mtDNA entered the zygote, mtDNA was not eliminated and could be detected in newborn mice. Based on these results, we conclude that, in mice, maternal inheritance of mtDNA is not an active process of sperm mitochondrial and mtDNA elimination achieved through autophagy in early embryos, but may be a passive process as a result of prefertilization sperm mtDNA elimination and uneven mitochondrial distribution in embryos.
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