Paternally inherited H3K27me3 affects chromatin accessibility in mouse embryos produced by round spermatid injection.
Mizuki SakamotoDaiyu ItoRei InoueSayaka WakayamaYasuyuki KikuchiLi YangErika HayashiRina EmuraHirosuke ShiuraTakashi KohdaSatoshi H NamekawaTakashi IshiuchiTeruhiko WakayamaMasatoshi OogaPublished in: Development (Cambridge, England) (2022)
Round spermatid injection (ROSI) results in a lower birth rate than intracytoplasmic sperm injection, which has hampered its clinical application. Inefficient development of ROSI embryos has been attributed to epigenetic abnormalities. However, the chromatin-based mechanism that underpins the low birth rate in ROSI remains to be determined. Here, we show that a repressive histone mark, H3K27me3, persists from mouse round spermatids into zygotes in ROSI and that round spermatid-derived H3K27me3 is associated with less accessible chromatin and impaired gene expression in ROSI embryos. These loci are initially marked by H3K27me3 but undergo histone modification remodelling in spermiogenesis, resulting in reduced H3K27me3 in normal spermatozoa. Therefore, the absence of epigenetic remodelling, presumably mediated by histone turnover during spermiogenesis, leads to dysregulation of chromatin accessibility and transcription in ROSI embryos. Thus, our results unveil a molecular logic, in which chromatin states in round spermatids impinge on chromatin accessibility and transcription in ROSI embryos, highlighting the importance of epigenetic remodelling during spermiogenesis in successful reproduction.