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Publication : Maternal TET3 is dispensable for embryonic development but is required for neonatal growth.

First Author  Tsukada Y Year  2015
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  5
Pages  15876 PubMed ID  26507142
Mgi Jnum  J:248833 Mgi Id  MGI:6098866
Doi  10.1038/srep15876 Citation  Tsukada Y, et al. (2015) Maternal TET3 is dispensable for embryonic development but is required for neonatal growth. Sci Rep 5:15876
abstractText  The development of multicellular organisms is accompanied by reprogramming of the epigenome in specific cells, with the epigenome of most cell types becoming fixed after differentiation. Genome-wide reprogramming of DNA methylation occurs in primordial germ cells and in fertilized eggs during mammalian embryogenesis. The 5-methylcytosine (5mC) content of DNA thus undergoes a marked decrease in the paternal pronucleus of mammalian zygotes. This loss of DNA methylation has been thought to be mediated by an active demethylation mechanism independent of replication and to be required for development. TET3-mediated sequential oxidation of 5mC has recently been shown to contribute to the genome-wide loss of 5mC in the paternal pronucleus of mouse zygotes. We now show that TET3 localizes not only to the paternal pronucleus but also to the maternal pronucleus and oxidizes both paternal and maternal DNA in mouse zygotes, although these phenomena are less pronounced in the female pronucleus. Genetic ablation of TET3 in oocytes had no significant effect on oocyte development, maturation, or fertilization or on pregnancy, but it resulted in neonatal sublethality. Our results thus indicate that zygotic 5mC oxidation mediated by maternal TET3 is required for neonatal growth but is not essential for development.
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