Abstract

Before fertilization, the genome packaging of male and female gametes is very different. Indeed, whereas the female haploid genome is associated with histones in a somatic-like chromatin structure, most of the male genome is tightly bound to protamines. However, it has recently been demonstrated that the pericentric heterochromatin regions of the male genome are associated with specific H2A-like histone variants, named H2AL1 and H2AL2, suggesting a heterogeneous organization. The fate and role of the sex-specific genome packaging transmitted by germinal cells to the embryo are not well understood. The aim of the present study was to follow reprogramming of the parental genomes in early embryos after in vivo fertilization. We show here that two typical epigenetic markers, trimethylated lysine 9 of histone H3 (TriMethylH3K9) and acetylated H4, are asymmetrically distributed between the parental genomes in one-cell mouse embryos, confirming data from embryos obtained after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) or in vitro fertilization (IVF). Indeed, whereas the maternal genome is highly enriched with trimethylH3K9, this mark is not detected in the paternal genome. On the contrary, histone H4 incorporated in the paternal genome is highly acetylated at an early stage, while in the maternal pronucleus, the level of acetylated H4 remains low in early one-cell embryos and becomes enriched at a later stage. Moreover, our results suggest a very quick disappearance of histone H2A variants H2AL1 and H2Al2 from the paternal pericentric heterochromatin regions after sperm-egg fusion.

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