Single-cell sequencing of primate preimplantation embryos reveals chromosome elimination via cellular fragmentation and blastomere exclusion

Author:

Daughtry Brittany L.ORCID,Rosenkrantz Jimi L.ORCID,Lazar Nathan H.ORCID,Fei Suzanne S.,Redmayne Nash,Torkenczy Kristof A.,Adey AndrewORCID,Yan Melissa,Gao Lina,Park Byung,Nevonen Kimberly A.,Carbone LuciaORCID,Chavez Shawn L.ORCID

Abstract

Aneuploidy that arises during meiosis and/or mitosis is a major contributor to early embryo loss. We previously showed that human preimplantation embryos encapsulate missegregated chromosomes into micronuclei while undergoing cellular fragmentation and that fragments can contain chromosomal material, but the source of this DNA was unknown. Here, we leveraged the use of a nonhuman primate model and single-cell DNA-sequencing (scDNA-seq) to examine the chromosomal content of 471 individual samples comprising 254 blastomeres, 42 polar bodies, and 175 cellular fragments from a large number (N = 50) of disassembled rhesus cleavage-stage embryos. Our analysis revealed that the aneuploidy and micronucleation frequency is conserved between humans and macaques, and that fragments encapsulate whole and/or partial chromosomes lost from blastomeres. Single-cell/fragment genotyping showed that these chromosome-containing cellular fragments (CCFs) can be maternally or paternally derived and display double-stranded DNA breaks. DNA breakage was further indicated by reciprocal subchromosomal losses/gains between blastomeres and large segmental errors primarily detected at the terminal ends of chromosomes. By combining time-lapse imaging with scDNA-seq, we determined that multipolar divisions at the zygote or two-cell stage were associated with CCFs and generated a random mixture of chromosomally normal and abnormal blastomeres with uniparental or biparental origins. Despite frequent chromosome missegregation at the cleavage-stage, we show that CCFs and nondividing aneuploid blastomeres showing extensive DNA damage are prevented from incorporation into blastocysts. These findings suggest that embryos respond to chromosomal errors by encapsulation into micronuclei, elimination via cellular fragmentation, and selection against highly aneuploid blastomeres to overcome chromosome instability during preimplantation development.

Funder

Molecular and Cellular Biology Core

NIH/OD ONPRC

P.E.O. Scholar Award

N.L. Tartar Research Fellowship

T32 Reproductive Biology NIH Training Grant

Collins Medical Trust Foundation

Glenn/AFAR Scholarship for Research in the Biology of Aging

NIH/NICHD

National Library of Medicine Biomedical Informatics Training Grant

National Centers for Translational Research in Reproduction and Infertility

NIH

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Howard & Georgeanna Jones Foundation for Reproductive Medicine

Medical Research Foundation of Oregon

Collins Medical Trust

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Genetics

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