study hypothesis: We aimed to investigate if Cyclin E1 (CCNE1) plays a role in human embryogenesis, in particular during the early developmental stages characterized by a short cell cycle. studyfinding: CCNE1is expressed in plenipotent human embryonic cells and plays a critical role during hESC derivation via the naïve state and, potentially, normal embryo development. what is known already: A short cell cycle due to a truncated G1 phase has been associated with the high developmental capacity of embryonic cells.CCNE1is a critical G1/S transition regulator.CCNE1overexpression can cause shortening of the cell cycle and it is constitutively expressed in mouse embryonic stem cells and cancer cells. study design, samples/materials, methods:We investigated expression of CCNE1 in human preimplantation embryo development and embryonic stem cells (hESC). Functional studies included CCNE1 overexpression in hESC and CCNE1 downregulation in the outgrowths formed by plated human blastocysts. Analysis was performed by immunocytochemistry and quantitative real-time PCR. Mann-Whitney statistical test was applied. main results and the role of chance: The CCNE1 protein was ubiquitously and constitutively expressed in the plenipotent cells of the embryo from the 4-cell stage up to and including the full blastocyst. During blastocyst expansion, CCNE1 was downregulated in the trophectoderm (TE) cells. CCNE1 shortly co-localized with NANOG in the inner cell mass (ICM) of expanding blastocysts, mimicking the situation in naïve hESC. In the ICM of expanded blastocysts, which corresponds with primed hESC, CCNE1 defined a subpopulation of cells different from NANOG/POU5F1-expressing pluripotent epiblast (EPI) cells and GATA4/SOX17-expressing primitive endoderm (PrE) cells. This CCNE1-positive cell population was associated with visceral endoderm based on transthyretin expression and marked the third cell lineage within the ICM, besides EPI and PrE, which had never been described before.We also investigated the role of CCNE1 by plating expanded blastocysts for hESC derivation. As a result, all the cells including TE cells re-gained CCNE1 and, consequently,NANOGexpression, resembling the phenotype of naïve hESC. The inhibition of CCNE1 expression with siRNA blocked proliferation and caused degeneration of those plated cells. limitations, reasons for caution: The study is based on a limited number of good-quality human embryos donated to research. wider implications of the findings: Our study sheds light on the processes underlying the high developmental potential of early human embryonic cells. The CCNE1-positive plenipotent cell type corresponds with a phenotype that enables early human embryos to recover after fragmentation, cryodamage or (single cell) biopsy on day 3 for preimplantation genetic diagnosis. Knowledge on the expression and function of genes responsible for this flexibility will help us to better understand the undifferentiated state in stem cell biologyand might enable us to improve technologies in assisted reproduction. large scale data: NA study funding and competing interest(s): This research is supported by grants from the Fund for Scientific Research - Flanders (FWO-Vlaanderen), the Methusalem (METH) of the VUB and Scientific Research Fond Willy Gepts of UZ Brussel. There are no competing interests.
CITATION STYLE
Krivega, M. V., Geens, M., Heindryckx, B., Santos-Ribeiro, S., Tournaye, H., & Van de Velde, H. (2015). Cyclin E1 plays a key role in balancing between totipotency and differentiation in human embryonic cells. Molecular Human Reproduction, 21(12), 942–956. https://doi.org/10.1093/molehr/gav053
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