Dual spindles assemble in bovine zygotes despite the presence of paternal centrosomes

Publication date

2021-11-01

Authors

Schneider, Isabell
de Ruijter-Villani, MartaORCID 0000-0002-6522-9493ISNI 0000000419429448
Hossain, M Julius
Stout, Tom A.E.ORCID 0000-0001-5321-8095ISNI 0000000387838262
Ellenberg, Jan

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Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

The first mitosis of the mammalian embryo must partition the parental genomes contained in two pronuclei. In rodent zygotes, sperm centrosomes are degraded, and instead, acentriolar microtubule organizing centers and microtubule self-organization guide the assembly of two separate spindles around the genomes. In nonrodent mammals, including human or bovine, centrosomes are inherited from the sperm and have been widely assumed to be active. Whether nonrodent zygotes assemble a single centrosomal spindle around both genomes or follow the dual spindle self-assembly pathway is unclear. To address this, we investigated spindle assembly in bovine zygotes by systematic immunofluorescence and real-time light-sheet microscopy. We show that two independent spindles form despite the presence of centrosomes, which had little effect on spindle structure and were only loosely connected to the two spindles. We conclude that the dual spindle assembly pathway is conserved in nonrodent mammals. This could explain whole parental genome loss frequently observed in blastomeres of human IVF embryos.

Keywords

Cell Biology

Citation

Schneider, I, de Ruijter-Villani, M, Hossain, M J, Stout, T A E & Ellenberg, J 2021, 'Dual spindles assemble in bovine zygotes despite the presence of paternal centrosomes', Journal of Cell Biology, vol. 220, no. 11, e202010106, pp. 1-24. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.202010106