Abstract

Assisted oocyte activation (AOA) has been proposed as an effective technique to overcome the problem of impaired fertilization after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) but the safety of AOA remains a concern. We aimed to investigate if AOA induces imprinting effects on embryos. We used 13 cleavage embryos, nine blastocysts, and eight placentas from 15 patients. The subjects were divided into six groups by tissue type and with or without AOA. The methylation levels of imprinted genes (H19, paternally expressed gene [PEG3] and small nuclear ribonucleoprotein polypeptide N [SNRPN]) were tested by pyrosequencing. We observed different methylation levels among cleavage embryos. The variability was much more remarkable between cleavage embryos than blastocysts and placenta tissues. The methylation levels were especially higher in SNRPN and lower in the H19 gene in AOA embryos than those without AOA. No significant difference was found either among blastocysts or among placenta tissues regardless of AOA. The methylation levels of the three genes in blastocysts were very similar to those in the placenta. Compared to conventional ICSI, AOA changed imprinting methylation rates at H19 and SNRPN in cleavage embryos but not in the blastocyst stage and placenta. We recommend that blastocyst transfer should be considered for patients undergoing AOA during in vitro fertilization.

Highlights

  • The introduction and implementation of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) have become the most successful micromanipulation procedure for treating male infertility

  • In order to evaluate the possible impact of assisted oocyte activation (AOA) on epigenetics, we quantified DNA methylation of three imprinted genes (PEG3, SNPRN, and H19) using pyrosequencing on cleavage embryos, blastocysts, and placenta

  • AOA is an effective method for avoiding total fertilization failure

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Summary

Introduction

The introduction and implementation of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) have become the most successful micromanipulation procedure for treating male infertility. The AOA protocol is usually based on Ca2+ ionophores [9,10,11,12], strontium [13,14], a modified ICSI technique [15,16], or electric pulses [17,18]. Among these protocols, Ca2+ ionophore A23187 treatment has been widely applied in human oocyte activation [3]

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