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1 June 2004 Early Transcriptional Activation of the Hsp70.1 Gene by Osmotic Stress in One-Cell Embryos of the Mouse
Maria Teresa Fiorenza, Arturo Bevilacqua, Sonia Canterini, Simona Torcia, Marco Pontecorvi, Franco Mangia
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Abstract

In fertilized mouse eggs, de novo transcription of embryonic genes is first observed during the S phase of the one-cell stage. This transcription, however, is mostly limited to the male pronucleus and possibly uncoupled from translation, making the functional meaning obscure. We found that one-cell mouse embryos respond to the osmotic shock of in vitro isolation with migration of HSF1, the canonical stress activator of mammalian heat shock genes, to pronuclei and by transient transcription of the hsp70.1, but not hsp70.3 and hsp90, heat shock genes. Isolated growing dictyate oocytes also display a nuclear HSF1 localization, but, in contrast with embryos, they transcribe both hsp70.1 and hsp70.3 genes only after heat shock. Intranuclear injection of double-stranded oligodeoxyribonucleotides containing HSE, GAGA box or GC box consensus sequences, and antibodies raised to transcription factors HSF1, HSF2, Drosophila melanogaster GAGA factor, or Sp1 demonstrated that hsp70.1 transcription depends on HSF1 in both oocytes and embryos and that Sp1 is dispensable in oocytes and inhibitory in the embryos. Hsp70.1 thus represents the first endogenous gene so far identified to be physiologically activated and tightly regulated after fertilization in mammals.

Maria Teresa Fiorenza, Arturo Bevilacqua, Sonia Canterini, Simona Torcia, Marco Pontecorvi, and Franco Mangia "Early Transcriptional Activation of the Hsp70.1 Gene by Osmotic Stress in One-Cell Embryos of the Mouse," Biology of Reproduction 70(6), 1606-1613, (1 June 2004). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.103.024877
Received: 30 October 2003; Accepted: 1 January 2004; Published: 1 June 2004
KEYWORDS
developmental biology
early development
embryo
gene regulation
oocyte development
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