info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Mediator complex component MED13 regulates zygotic genome activation and is required for postimplantation development in the mouse
Fecha
2018-04Registro en:
Miao, Yi Liang; Gambini, Andres; Zhang, Yingpei; Padilla Banks, Elizabeth; Jefferson, Wendy N.; et al.; Mediator complex component MED13 regulates zygotic genome activation and is required for postimplantation development in the mouse; Oxford University Press; Biology of Reproduction; 98; 4; 4-2018; 449-464
0006-3363
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Miao, Yi Liang
Gambini, Andres
Zhang, Yingpei
Padilla Banks, Elizabeth
Jefferson, Wendy N.
Bernhardt, Miranda L.
Huang, Weichun
Li, Leping
Williams, Carmen J.
Resumen
Understanding factors that regulate zygotic genome activation (ZGA) is critical for determining how cells are reprogrammed to become totipotent or pluripotent. There is limited information regarding how this process occurs physiologically in early mammalian embryos. Here, we identify a mediator complex subunit, MED13, as translated during mouse oocyte maturation and transcribed early from the zygotic genome. Knockdown and conditional knockout approaches demonstrate that MED13 is essential for ZGA in the mouse, in part by regulating expression of the embryo-specific chromatin remodeling complex, esBAF. The role of MED13 in ZGA is mediated in part by interactions with E2F transcription factors. In addition to MED13, its paralog, MED13L, is required for successful preimplantation embryo development. MED13L partially compensates for loss of MED13 function in preimplantation knockout embryos, but postimplantation development is not rescued by MED13L. Our data demonstrate an essential role for MED13 in supporting chromatin reprogramming and directed transcription of essential genes during ZGA.