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Publication : Maternal expression and early induction of histone gene transcription factor Hinfp sustains development in pre-implantation embryos.

First Author  Ghule PN Year  2016
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  419
Issue  2 Pages  311-320
PubMed ID  27609454 Mgi Jnum  J:237226
Mgi Id  MGI:5811716 Doi  10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.09.003
Citation  Ghule PN, et al. (2016) Maternal expression and early induction of histone gene transcription factor Hinfp sustains development in pre-implantation embryos. Dev Biol 419(2):311-320
abstractText  Fidelity of histone gene expression is important for normal cell growth and differentiation that is stringently controlled during development but is compromised during tumorigenesis. Efficient production of histones for packaging newly replicated DNA is particularly important for proper cell division and epigenetic control during the initial pre-implantation stages of embryonic development. Here, we addressed the unresolved question of when the machinery for histone gene transcription is activated in the developing zygote to accommodate temporal demands for histone gene expression. We examined induction of Histone Nuclear Factor P (HINFP), the only known transcription factor required for histone H4 gene expression, that binds directly to a unique H4 promoter-specific element to regulate histone H4 transcription. We show that Hinfp gene transcripts are stored in oocytes and maternally transmitted to the zygote. Transcripts from the paternal Hinfp gene, which reflect induction of zygotic gene expression, are apparent at the 4- to 8-cell stage, when most maternal mRNA pools are depleted. Loss of Hinfp expression due to gene ablation reduces cell numbers in E3.5 stage embryos and compromises implantation. Reduced cell proliferation is attributable to severe reduction in histone mRNA levels accompanied by reduced cell survival and genomic damage as measured by cleaved Caspase 3 and phospho-H2AX staining, respectively. We conclude that transmission of maternal Hinfp transcripts and zygotic activation of the Hinfp gene together are necessary to control H4 gene expression in early pre-implantation embryos in order to support normal embryonic development.
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