Author:
Chen Lu,Liu Shao-Yuan,Su Rui-Bao,Wu Yu-Ke,Wang Wen-Jing,Wu Xuan,Zhang Song-Ying,Qiao Jie,Sha Qian-Qian,Fan Heng-Yu
Abstract
AbstractMammalian oocyte maturation is driven by the strict translational regulation of maternal mRNAs stored in the cytoplasm. However, the function and mechanism of post-transcriptional chemical modifications, especially the newly identified N4-acetylcytidine (ac4C) modification catalyzed by N-acetyltransferase 10 (NAT10), are unknown. In this study, we developed a low-input ac4C sequencing technology, ac4C LACE-seq, and mapped 8241 ac4C peaks at the whole-transcriptome level using 50 mouse oocytes at the germinal vesicle stage. We profiled the mRNA landscapes of NAT10-interactions and ac4C modifications. The NAT10-interacted and ac4C-modified transcripts are associated with high translation efficiency in oocytes. Oocyte-specificNat10knockout wiped out ac4C signals in oocytes and caused severe defects in meiotic maturation and female infertility. ac4C LACE-seq results indicated thatNat10deletion led to a failure of ac4C deposition on mRNAs encoding key maternal factors, such as MSY2, ZAR1, BTG4, and cyclin B1, which regulate transcriptome stability and maternal-to-zygotic transition.Nat10-deleted oocytes showed decreased mRNA translation efficiency during meiotic maturation, partially due to the direct inhibition of ac4C sites on specific transcripts. In summary, we developed a low-input, high-sensitivity mRNA ac4C profiling approach and highlighted the important physiological function of ac4C in the precise regulation of oocyte meiotic maturation by enhancing translation efficiency.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory