Abstract

What causes hybrid vigor phenotypes in mammalian oocytes and preimplantation embryos? Answering this question should provide new insight into determinants of oocyte and embryo quality and infertility. Hybrid vigor could arise through a variety of mechanisms, many of which must operate through posttranscriptional mechanisms affecting oocyte mRNA accumulation, stability, translation, and degradation. The differential regulation of such mRNAs may impact essential pathways and functions within the oocyte. We conducted in-depth transcriptome comparisons of immature and mature oocytes of C57BL/6J and DBA/2J inbred strains and C57BL/6J × DBA/2J F1 (BDF1) hybrid oocytes with RNA sequencing, combined with novel computational methods of analysis. We observed extensive differences in mRNA expression and regulation between parental inbred strains and between inbred and hybrid genotypes, including mRNAs encoding proposed markers of oocyte quality. Unique BDF1 oocyte characteristics arise through a combination of additive dominance and incomplete dominance features in the transcriptome, with a lesser degree of transgressive mRNA expression. Special features of the BDF1 transcriptome most prominently relate to histone expression, mitochondrial function, and oxidative phosphorylation. The study reveals the major underlying mechanisms that contribute to superior properties of hybrid oocytes in a mouse model.

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