Metabolic remodelling during early mouse embryo development.
Jing ZhaoKe YaoHua YuLing ZhangYuyan XuLang ChenZhen SunYuqing ZhuCheng ZhangYuli QianShuyan JiHongru PanMin ZhangJie ChenCristina CorreiaTaylor WeiskittelDa-Wei LinYu-Zheng ZhaoSriram ChandrasekaranXudong FuDan ZhangHeng-Yu FanWei XieHu LiZe-Ping HuJin ZhangPublished in: Nature metabolism (2021)
During early mammalian embryogenesis, changes in cell growth and proliferation depend on strict genetic and metabolic instructions. However, our understanding of metabolic reprogramming and its influence on epigenetic regulation in early embryo development remains elusive. Here we show a comprehensive metabolomics profiling of key stages in mouse early development and the two-cell and blastocyst embryos, and we reconstructed the metabolic landscape through the transition from totipotency to pluripotency. Our integrated metabolomics and transcriptomics analysis shows that while two-cell embryos favour methionine, polyamine and glutathione metabolism and stay in a more reductive state, blastocyst embryos have higher metabolites related to the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid cycle, and present a more oxidative state. Moreover, we identify a reciprocal relationship between α-ketoglutarate (α-KG) and the competitive inhibitor of α-KG-dependent dioxygenases, L-2-hydroxyglutarate (L-2-HG), where two-cell embryos inherited from oocytes and one-cell zygotes display higher L-2-HG, whereas blastocysts show higher α-KG. Lastly, increasing 2-HG availability impedes erasure of global histone methylation markers after fertilization. Together, our data demonstrate dynamic and interconnected metabolic, transcriptional and epigenetic network remodelling during early mouse embryo development.