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Effect of Substrate Stiffness on Early Mouse Embryo Development

It is becoming increasingly clear that cells are remarkably sensitive to the biophysical cues of their microenvironment and that these cues play a significant role in influencing their behaviors. In this study, we investigated whether the early pre-implantation embryo is sensitive to mechanical cues...

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Autores principales: Kolahi, Kevin S., Donjacour, Annemarie, Liu, Xiaowei, Lin, Wingka, Simbulan, Rhodel K., Bloise, Enrrico, Maltepe, Emin, Rinaudo, Paolo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409240/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22860009
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0041717
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author Kolahi, Kevin S.
Donjacour, Annemarie
Liu, Xiaowei
Lin, Wingka
Simbulan, Rhodel K.
Bloise, Enrrico
Maltepe, Emin
Rinaudo, Paolo
author_facet Kolahi, Kevin S.
Donjacour, Annemarie
Liu, Xiaowei
Lin, Wingka
Simbulan, Rhodel K.
Bloise, Enrrico
Maltepe, Emin
Rinaudo, Paolo
author_sort Kolahi, Kevin S.
collection PubMed
description It is becoming increasingly clear that cells are remarkably sensitive to the biophysical cues of their microenvironment and that these cues play a significant role in influencing their behaviors. In this study, we investigated whether the early pre-implantation embryo is sensitive to mechanical cues, i.e. the elasticity of the culture environment. To test this, we have developed a new embryo culture system where the mechanical properties of the embryonic environment can be precisely defined. The contemporary standard environment for embryo culture is the polystyrene petri dish (PD), which has a stiffness (1 GPa) that is six orders of magnitude greater than the uterine epithelium (1 kPa). To approximate more closely the mechanical aspects of the in vivo uterine environment we used polydimethyl-siloxane (PDMS) or fabricated 3D type I collagen gels (1 kPa stiffness, Col-1k group). Mouse embryo development on alternate substrates was compared to that seen on the petri dish; percent development, hatching frequency, and cell number were observed. Our results indicated that embryos are sensitive to the mechanical environment on which they are cultured. Embryos cultured on Col-1k showed a significantly greater frequency of development to 2-cell (68±15% vs. 59±18%), blastocyst (64±9.1% vs. 50±18%) and hatching blastocyst stages (54±25% vs. 21±16%) and an increase in the number of trophectodermal cell (TE,65±13 vs. 49±12 cells) compared to control embryos cultured in PD (mean±S.D.; p<.01). Embryos cultured on Col-1k and PD were transferred to recipient females and observed on embryonic day 12.5. Both groups had the same number of fetuses, however the placentas of the Col-1k fetuses were larger than controls, suggesting a continued effect of the preimplantation environment. In summary, characteristics of the preimplantation microenvironment affect pre- and post-implantation growth.
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spelling pubmed-34092402012-08-02 Effect of Substrate Stiffness on Early Mouse Embryo Development Kolahi, Kevin S. Donjacour, Annemarie Liu, Xiaowei Lin, Wingka Simbulan, Rhodel K. Bloise, Enrrico Maltepe, Emin Rinaudo, Paolo PLoS One Research Article It is becoming increasingly clear that cells are remarkably sensitive to the biophysical cues of their microenvironment and that these cues play a significant role in influencing their behaviors. In this study, we investigated whether the early pre-implantation embryo is sensitive to mechanical cues, i.e. the elasticity of the culture environment. To test this, we have developed a new embryo culture system where the mechanical properties of the embryonic environment can be precisely defined. The contemporary standard environment for embryo culture is the polystyrene petri dish (PD), which has a stiffness (1 GPa) that is six orders of magnitude greater than the uterine epithelium (1 kPa). To approximate more closely the mechanical aspects of the in vivo uterine environment we used polydimethyl-siloxane (PDMS) or fabricated 3D type I collagen gels (1 kPa stiffness, Col-1k group). Mouse embryo development on alternate substrates was compared to that seen on the petri dish; percent development, hatching frequency, and cell number were observed. Our results indicated that embryos are sensitive to the mechanical environment on which they are cultured. Embryos cultured on Col-1k showed a significantly greater frequency of development to 2-cell (68±15% vs. 59±18%), blastocyst (64±9.1% vs. 50±18%) and hatching blastocyst stages (54±25% vs. 21±16%) and an increase in the number of trophectodermal cell (TE,65±13 vs. 49±12 cells) compared to control embryos cultured in PD (mean±S.D.; p<.01). Embryos cultured on Col-1k and PD were transferred to recipient females and observed on embryonic day 12.5. Both groups had the same number of fetuses, however the placentas of the Col-1k fetuses were larger than controls, suggesting a continued effect of the preimplantation environment. In summary, characteristics of the preimplantation microenvironment affect pre- and post-implantation growth. Public Library of Science 2012-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3409240/ /pubmed/22860009 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0041717 Text en © 2012 Kolahi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kolahi, Kevin S.
Donjacour, Annemarie
Liu, Xiaowei
Lin, Wingka
Simbulan, Rhodel K.
Bloise, Enrrico
Maltepe, Emin
Rinaudo, Paolo
Effect of Substrate Stiffness on Early Mouse Embryo Development
title Effect of Substrate Stiffness on Early Mouse Embryo Development
title_full Effect of Substrate Stiffness on Early Mouse Embryo Development
title_fullStr Effect of Substrate Stiffness on Early Mouse Embryo Development
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Substrate Stiffness on Early Mouse Embryo Development
title_short Effect of Substrate Stiffness on Early Mouse Embryo Development
title_sort effect of substrate stiffness on early mouse embryo development
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3409240/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22860009
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0041717
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