Abstract

BackgroundTGF-β signaling pathways regulate several crucial processes in female reproduction. AKT is a non-SMAD signaling pathway regulated by TGF-β ligands essential for oocyte maturation and early embryonic development in the mouse, but its regulatory role in bovine early embryonic development is not well established. Previously, we demonstrated a stimulatory role for follistatin (a binding protein for specific members of TGF-β superfamily) in early bovine embryonic development. The objectives of the present studies were to determine the functional role of AKT signaling in bovine early embryonic development and embryotrophic actions of follistatin.MethodsWe used AKT inhibitors III and IV as pharmacological inhibitors of AKT signaling pathway during the first 72 h of in vitro embryo culture. Effects of AKT inhibition on early embryonic development and AKT phosphorylation were investigated in the presence or absence of exogenous follistatin.ResultsPharmacological inhibition of AKT signaling resulted in a significant reduction in early embryo cleavage, and development to the 8- to 16-cell and blastocyst stages (d7). Treatment with exogenous follistatin increased AKT phosphorylation and rescued the inhibitory effect of AKT inhibitors III and IV on AKT phosphorylation and early embryonic development.ConclusionsCollectively, results suggest a potential requirement of AKT for bovine early embryonic development, and suggest a potential role for follistatin in regulation of AKT signaling in early bovine embryos.

Highlights

  • transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) signaling pathways regulate several crucial processes in female reproduction

  • AKT inhibition during the initial 72 h of in vitro culture reduced indices of embryonic developmental progression To elucidate the potential role of AKT in bovine early embryogenesis, effects of AKT inhibitor III and AKT inhibitor IV supplementation on different developmental indices were determined

  • Results suggest a potential requirement of AKT for bovine early embryonic development, and a possible relationship between the embryotrophic actions of follistatin and the AKT signaling pathway

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Summary

Introduction

AKT is a non-SMAD signaling pathway regulated by TGF-β ligands essential for oocyte maturation and early embryonic development in the mouse, but its regulatory role in bovine early embryonic development is not well established. We demonstrated a stimulatory role for follistatin (a binding protein for specific members of TGF-β superfamily) in early bovine embryonic development. The objectives of the present studies were to determine the functional role of AKT signaling in bovine early embryonic development and embryotrophic actions of follistatin. Follistatin is a transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) superfamily binding protein that may exert its embryotrophic effects through modulation of one or more of the SMAD [6, 7] or non-SMAD [8,9,10] signaling pathways. How follistatin promotes early embryonic development, early cleavage, is still not fully understood.

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