O-083 Non-invasive, label-free optical analysis to detect aneuploidy within the inner cell mass of the preimplantation embryo
Abstract Study question Can we separate between control and reversine-treated cells within the inner cell mass (ICM) of the mouse preimplantation embryo by using label-free and non-invasive hyperspectral microscopy? Summary answer Hyperspectral microscopy is able to discern between control and rever...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Human reproduction (Oxford) 2021-08, Vol.36 (Supplement_1) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract
Study question
Can we separate between control and reversine-treated cells within the inner cell mass (ICM) of the mouse preimplantation embryo by using label-free and non-invasive hyperspectral microscopy?
Summary answer
Hyperspectral microscopy is able to discern between control and reversine-treated cells using cellular autofluorescence in the complete absence of fluorescence tags.
What is known already
Embryo mosaicism (containing cells that are euploid (46 chromosomes) and aneuploid (deviation from the expected number of chromosomes)) affects up to 17.3% of human blastocyst embryos. Current diagnosis of aneuploidy in the IVF clinic involves a biopsy of trophectoderm (TE) cells or spent media followed by sequencing. In some blastocyst embryos these approaches will fail to diagnose of the proportion of aneuploid cells within the fetal lineage (ICM).
Study design, size, duration
The impact of aneuploidy on cellular metabolism was assessed by using cellular autofluoresence and hyperspectral microscopy (broad spectral profile). Two models were employed: (i) Primary human fibroblast cells with known karyotypes (4-6 independent replicates, euploid n = 467; aneuploid n = 969) and reversine induced aneuploidy in mouse embryos (5-8 independent replicates, 30-44 cells per group). Both models were subjected to hyperspectral imaging to quantify native cell fluorescence.
Participants/materials, setting, methods
The human model is comprised of euploid (male and female) and aneuploid (triploid and trisomies: 13, 18, 21, XXX, and XXY) primary human fibroblast cells. For the mouse model, we treated embryos with reversine, a reversible spindle assembly checkpoint inhibitor, during the 4- to 8-cell division. Individual blastomeres were dissociated from control and reversine treated 8-cell embryos. Blastomeres were either imaged directly or used to generate chimeric blastocysts with differing ratios of control:reversine-treated cells.
Main results and the role of chance
Following unsupervised linear unmixing, the relative abundance of metabolic cofactors was quantified: reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(P)H) and flavins with the subsequent calculation of the optical redox ratio (ORR: Flavins/[NAD(P)H + Flavins]). Primary human fibroblast cells displayed an increase in the relative abundance of NAD(P)H with a decrease in flavins, leading to a significant reduction in the ORR for aneuploid cells (P |
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ISSN: | 0268-1161 1460-2350 |
DOI: | 10.1093/humrep/deab125.013 |