6 Decelerating embryo development? Characterisation of the uterine environment in European roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) during diapause
V. A. van der Weijden A , A. R. Vegas A , V. Milojevic A , A. B. Rüegg A , J. T. Bick A , S. Bauersachs B , G. J. Arnold C , T. Fröhlich C , P. Giesbertz D , H. Daniel D , B. Drews A and S. E. Ulbrich AA Animal Physiology, Institute of Agricultural Sciences, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;
B Genetics and Functional Genomics, Clinic for Animal Reproduction Medicine, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;
C Laboratory for Functional Genome Analysis, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munich, Munich, Germany;
D Nutritional Physiology, Technical University Munich, Munich, Germany
Reproduction, Fertility and Development 31(1) 128-128 https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv31n1Ab6
Published online: 3 December 2018
Abstract
The early developing embryo faces a continuously changing microenvironment to supports its growth. In the European roe deer, this environment accompanies embryonic diapause, a period of up to 4 months in which fertilization and subsequent implantation are decoupled. Diapause is characterised by a deceleration of embryonic growth. In most ruminants such as cattle and sheep, interferon tau (IFNt) plays a major role in maternal recognition of pregnancy. Uniquely to ruminants, the roe deer embryo does not secrete IFNt. The roe deer was used as a model species to gain insights into the changing uterine environment devoid of IFNt that supports prolonged decelerated embryo development, resumption of developmental velocity, and subsequent implantation. Uterine fluid samples from 188 female does were collected during regular huntings between September and January, and 4 developmental stages-blastocysts at early, mid, and late diapause and elongated embryos (16, 57, 97, and 18 does per developmental stage, respectively)-were defined. The developmental stages were assigned based on morphological characteristics of the embryo and the embryonic genomic DNA content. For the analysis of amino acids (AA), all 188 uterine fluid samples were subjected to targeted liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Almost all AA increased over the course of embryo development. Although most AA showed developmental stage-specific concentration peaks, serine, glycine, alanine, glutamate, and glutamine were most abundantly present irrespective of the developmental progression. For the analysis of the protein abundances in the uterine fluid in a selected subset of samples (n = 5 per developmental stage), holistic liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry identified and quantified a total of 819 proteins with a false discovery rate of <1%. Comparison between the developmental stages revealed 106 differentially abundant proteins. Most changes in protein abundance that occurred related to embryo elongation. Interestingly, 713 proteins remained stable during embryo development, indicating that these proteins may contribute to prolonged embryo survival during embryonic diapause. The differentially abundant proteins were clustered with DAVID Bioinformatics Resources 6.8 (