Litcius/Paper detail

Early Embryo Exposure to Assisted Reproductive Manipulation Induced Subtle Changes in Liver Epigenetics with No Apparent Negative Health Consequences in Rabbit

Ximo García‐Domínguez, Gianfranco Diretto, David S. Peñaranda, Sarah Frusciante, Victor García‐Carpintero, Joaquı́n Cañizares, J.S. Vicente, Francisco Marco‐Jiménez

2021International Journal of Molecular Sciences14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Embryo manipulation is a requisite step in assisted reproductive technology (ART). Therefore, it is of great necessity to appraise the safety of ART and investigate the long-term effect, including lipid metabolism, on ART-conceived offspring. Augmenting our ART rabbit model to investigate lipid metabolic outcomes in offspring longitudinally, we detected variations in hepatic DNA methylation ART offspring in the F3 generation for embryonic exposure (multiple ovulation, vitrification and embryo transfer). Through adult liver metabolomics and proteomics, we identified changes mainly related to lipid metabolism (e.g., polyunsaturated fatty acids, steroids, steroid hormone). We also found that DNA methylation analysis was linked to changes in lipid metabolism and apoptosis genes. Nevertheless, these differences did not apparently alter the general health status. Thus, our findings suggest that ART is likely to be a player in embryo epigenetic events related to hepatic homeostasis alteration in adulthood.

Topics & Concepts

OffspringEpigeneticsDNA methylationBiologyLipid metabolismEmbryoReproductive technologyAssisted reproductive technologyMetabolomicsPregnancyAndrologyPhysiologyEndocrinologyBioinformaticsGeneticsGeneEmbryogenesisMedicineInfertilityGene expressionBirth, Development, and HealthReproductive Biology and FertilityAssisted Reproductive Technology and Twin Pregnancy