The histone variant TH2B, enriched in oocytes, sperm, and early embryos, decreases as embryos differentiate into pre-gastrula stages. Despite its presence, the role of TH2B in epigenetic reprogramming during early embryonic development remains largely under-researched. Our study employed ultra-low-input ChIP-seq (ULI-ChIP) to analyze the genome-wide distribution of TH2B in MII oocytes and early embryos. We found that TH2B is enriched in the chromatin of oocytes and 2-cell stage embryos but becomes less prevalent after the 2-cell stage. Correlation analysis revealed that the TH2B chromatin patterns in sperm and preimplantation embryos are more similar to each other than to those in MII oocytes. Gene ontology (GO) analysis of TH2B-occupied loci linked them to various developmental processes, including oogenesis, fertilization, chromatin modification, and transcription regulation. The study also identified a strong association of TH2B with specific transposable elements (TEs), particularly long terminal repeats (LTRs), which are known to regulate preimplantation development. Additionally, early embryos showed H3K9me3 marks at TH2B-bound loci. TH2B exhibited strong correlations with H2A.Z and H3.3 in the 2-cell and 8-cell stages, a positive association with H3K27Ac and H3K4me3, and a negative correlation with H3K27me3. Allelic reprogramming analysis of TH2B in embryos from C57BL/6J and DBA/2J crosses revealed differential dynamics between maternal and paternal alleles, with a notable paternal bias at the promoter in 2-cell embryos. Thus, TH2B's enrichment in early embryonic stages and its association with key regulatory regions and histone modifications underscore its importance in ZGA and subsequent developmental processes.
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