Litcius/Paper detail

Nucleosomes in mammalian sperm: conveying paternal epigenetic inheritance or subject to reprogramming between generations?

Laura Gaspa-Toneu, Antoine H.F.M. Peters

2023Current Opinion in Genetics & Development41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The genome of mammalian sperm is largely packaged by sperm-specific proteins termed protamines. The presence of some residual nucleosomes has, however, emerged as a potential source of paternal epigenetic inheritance between generations. Sperm nucleosomes bear important regulatory histone marks and locate at gene-regulatory regions, functional elements, and intergenic regions. It is unclear whether sperm nucleosomes are retained at specific genomic locations in a deterministic manner or are randomly preserved due to inefficient exchange of histones by protamines. Recent studies indicate heterogeneity in chromatin packaging within sperm populations and an extensive reprogramming of paternal histone marks post fertilization. Obtaining single-sperm nucleosome distributions is fundamental to estimating the potential of sperm-borne nucleosomes in instructing mammalian embryonic development and in the transmission of acquired phenotypes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySpermReprogrammingNucleosomeHistoneEpigeneticsGeneticsChromatinProtamineCell biologyGeneHeparinBiochemistrySperm and Testicular FunctionEpigenetics and DNA MethylationGenetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal Abnormalities