Insulin‐like growth factor 1 (IGF‐1) activity is established by the regulation of IGF binding protein activity, which blocks IGF‐1 functions, whereas pregnancy‐associated plasma protein‐A (PAPP‐A) improves IGF‐1 bioavailability and facilitates binding to IGF receptors. To further extend our understanding of the effect of exogenous PAPP‐A on bovine embryo production, we added this protein during in vitro maturation of cumulus‐oocyte complexes (COCs); moreover, we assessed its effects on IGF‐1 quantity in the maturation medium, embryonic yield and postwarming survival, blastocyst quality, and transcript abundance. Bovine COCs were matured in a serum‐free medium, either with PAPP‐A supplementation (100 ng/ml) or without (control). The treatment group produced higher IGF‐1 concentrations in the maturation medium; however, showed no difference on cleavage, blastocysts rates, and embryonic survival 3 and 24 hr postcryopreservation. Regarding gene expression, VNN1 was upregulated, whereas AGPAT9, FASN, EGFR, HAS2, and IMPDH1 were downregulated in PAPP‐A treated. PAPP‐A treated, CPT2, DNMT3A, and TFAM were upregulated, whereas ATF4 and IFITM3 were downregulated. We concluded that although the addition of PAPP‐A did not affect embryo yield and blastocyst survival, higher IGF‐1 levels may affect embryo competence through differential expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism, oocyte competence, and mitochondrial function.
The aim of present work was to assess the effects of pregnancy-associated serum protein A (PAPP-A) during oocyte in vitro maturation (IVM) on meiosis progression, DNA fragmentation, IGF-1 free bioavailability, as well as effects on embryo yield and transcriptional profile of matured cumulus–oocyte complexes (COC). First, the COC from a local abattoir were submitted to IVM for 24 h with TCM-199 serum-free medium supplemented with PAPP-A (100 ng mL−1: P100 group) or not (control group). The matured oocytes were submitted to evaluation of DNA fragmentation (TUNEL assay) and meiosis progression (Hoechst 33342; n = 5 replicates; 20 COC/replicate per group), and maturation medium was collected to measure levels of free IGF-1. Then, the oocytes were separated from their respective cumulus cells and followed for the transcriptional profile of 96 genes (3 reference genes; ACTH, GAPDH, PPIA) by RT-qPCR using Taqman® assays in the HD-Biomark System® (Fluidigm Corp., South San Francisco, CA, USA). Further, the matured oocytes were submitted to in vitro fertilization followed by in vitro culture for 7 days. On Days 3 and 7, the cleavage and blastocyst (BL) rates were verified. On Day 7, BL (3 BL/pool; control: n = 4 pools; P100: n = 5 pools) were collected to analyse the transcriptional pattern of 96 genes (4 reference genes; ACTH, GAPDH, PPIA, and SDHA) as described above for COC. The DNA fragmentation, meiosis progression, cleavage, and BL rates were calculated as percentages and transformed to arcsine. The mRNA abundance of target genes was normalized by geometric mean of reference genes and data were transformed to fold change. The free IGF-I concentration also was transformed to fold change. All data were tested by ANOVA and means were compared with t-test or Wilcoxon tests using JMP software (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). Differences were considered significant when P ≤ 0.05. The addition of PAPP-A increased free IGF-I concentration 1.27-fold in IVM medium. There were no alterations in the percentage of oocytes in metaphase II or oocyte DNA fragmentation. In cumulus cells, the genes BCL2, GPX1, RPLP0, and RPS25 (anti-apoptotic and anti-oxidative stress) was higher in the P100 group, whereas DICER, GREM1, GUCY1B3, and FOXO3 (cell proliferation, cumulus expansion, cGMP regulator, and apoptotic initiator, respectively) were higher in the control group. In oocytes, the mRNA relative abundance of ACACA, BCL2, H1FOO, TXNRD1, and VCAN (related with fatty acid synthesis, anti-apoptotic effect, chromatin regulation, oxidative stress processes, and cell proliferation, respectively) was higher in the P100 group. There was no difference in cleavage rate or embryo yield. The mRNA abundance of genes related to cellular stress (ATF4, GPX4, and HIF1A) and lipid metabolism (FASN and SREBF1) was lower in embryos of the P100 group. On the other hand, genes involved in cellular proliferation/differentiation (MAPK1) and pluripotency (POU5F1) were up-regulated in embryos of the P100 group. In conclusion, the addition of PAPP-A during the IVM increased free IGF-I and modulates the gene expression in COC and blastocysts, which could modify oocyte competence and embryo development.
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