Abstract
Fatty acid has a various role in preimplantation embryo development. Especially, Linoleic acid, polyunsaturated fatty acid, has been reported to affect the apoptosis pathway via nuclear transcription factor-kappa B. But to date, the function of NF-κB has not been demonstrated in porcine preimplantation embryos. We demonstrated that linoleic acid had a positive effect on embryo development at a certain concentration(25 μM), but developmental failure was observed at higher concentration. Furthermore, the expression level of NF-κB increased, unlike that of IL-6, as the concentration of linoleic acid increased. Interestingly, the concentration of NF-κB was found to increase even at the concentration of linoleic acid at which embryo development decreased. We found that pro-apoptotic gene expression was downregulated in the linoleic acid-treated group. It was also found that MCL-1, an anti-apoptotic gene known to be unaffected by IL-6, was found to be increased at the mRNA level in the linoleic acid-treated group. As the concentration of NF-kB increased, the nuclear translocation of C-JUN gradually increased dependent on the linoleic acid concentration. It was confirmed that NF-κB is an important factor in porcine embryos by treated ammonium pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate (APDC 0.1 μM, an inhibitor of NF-κB) affected NF-κB protein expression, IL-6 expression, and blastocyst production. These data supported porcine embryos can use exogenous linoleic acid as a metabolic energy source via NF-κB.
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