Absence of a molecular circadian clock in the preimplantation embryo is a conserved characteristic in the mammal
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-1-2023
Abstract
An embryonic circadian clock could conceivably organize cellular and developmental events temporally and in synchrony with other circadian rhythms in the mother. The hypothesis that a functional molecular clock exists in the preimplantation bovine, pig, human, and mouse embryo was tested by using publicly available RNAseq datasets to examine developmental changes in expression of the core genes responsible for the circadian clock – CLOCK, ARNTL, PER1, PER2, CRY1, and CRY2. In general, the transcript abundance of each gene decreased as development advanced to the blastocyst stage. The most notable exception was for CRY2, where transcript abundance was low and constant from the two-cell or four-cell to the blastocyst stage. Developmental patterns were generally the same for all species although there were some species-specific patterns such as an absence of PER1 expression in the pig, an increase in ARNTL expression at the four-cell stage in human, and an increase in expression of Clock and Per1 from the zygote to two-cell stage in the mouse. Analysis of intronic reads (indicative of embryonic transcription) for bovine embryos indicated an absence of embryonic transcription. Immunoreactive CRY1 was not detected in the bovine blastocyst. Results indicate that the preimplantation mammalian embryo lacks a functional intrinsic clock although specific components of the clock mechanism could conceivably play a role in other functions in the embryo.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Reproduction
First Page
199
Last Page
207
Recommended Citation
Stanton, D., Graf, A., Maia, T., Blum, H., Jiang, Z., & Hansen, P. (2023). Absence of a molecular circadian clock in the preimplantation embryo is a conserved characteristic in the mammal. Reproduction, 166 (3), 199-207. https://doi.org/10.1530/REP-23-0104