Abstract

Under ovarian hormone control, dormant blastocysts obtain implantation capacity (known as blastocyst activation) through their global gene expression. After the activated blastocysts communicate with the receptive uterus, the implantation-competent blastocysts start the implantation. Although dormant and activated blastocysts have different gene expression levels, the regulatory mechanisms underlying these transcriptions remain unclear. Hence, this study aimed to analyze epigenetic marks in dormant and activated blastocysts. In mice, blastocyst dormancy is artificially induced by daily progesterone injection without estrogen supplementation after peri-implantation ovariectomy; when estrogen is administered concomitantly, blastocyst activation and implantation occur. These phenomena demonstrate a mouse model of delayed implantation. We collected dormant and activated blastocysts from a delayed implantation mouse model. RNA-seq, methylated DNA immunoprecipitation (MeDIP)-seq, and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-seq for H3K4 me3 and H3K27 me3 were performed using dormant and activated blastocysts. Cell cycle-related transcripts were affected during blastocyst activation. DNA methylations were accumulated in downregulated genes in the activated blastocysts. Histone H3 trimethylations were globally altered between the dormant and activated blastocysts. Dormant and activated blastocysts have unique methylation patterns on DNA and histone H3, with high correlation to gene expression. DNA methylation and histone modification can regulate preimplantation blastocyst activation.

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