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Single-cell multi-omics profiling of human preimplantation embryos identifies cytoskeletal defects during embryonic arrest.

Teng WangJunhua PengJiaqi FanNi TangRui HuaXueliang ZhouZhihao WangLongfei WangYanling BaiXiaowan QuanZimeng WangLi ZhangChen LuoWeiqing ZhangXiangjin KangJianqiao LiuLei LiLin Li
Published in: Nature cell biology (2024)
Human in vitro fertilized embryos exhibit low developmental capabilities, and the mechanisms that underlie embryonic arrest remain unclear. Here using a single-cell multi-omics sequencing approach, we simultaneously analysed alterations in the transcriptome, chromatin accessibility and the DNA methylome in human embryonic arrest due to unexplained reasons. Arrested embryos displayed transcriptome disorders, including a distorted microtubule cytoskeleton, increased genomic instability and impaired glycolysis, which were coordinated with multiple epigenetic reprogramming defects. We identified Aurora A kinase (AURKA) repression as a cause of embryonic arrest. Mechanistically, arrested embryos induced through AURKA inhibition resembled the reprogramming abnormalities of natural embryonic arrest in terms of the transcriptome, the DNA methylome, chromatin accessibility and H3K4me3 modifications. Mitosis-independent sequential activation of the zygotic genome in arrested embryos showed that YY1 contributed to human major zygotic genome activation. Collectively, our study decodes the reprogramming abnormalities and mechanisms of human embryonic arrest and the key regulators of zygotic genome activation.
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