Dynamic blastomere behaviour reflects human embryo ploidy by the four-cell stage

Previous studies have demonstrated that aneuploidy in human embryos is surprisingly frequent with 50–80% of cleavage-stage human embryos carrying an abnormal chromosome number. Here we combine non-invasive time-lapse imaging with karyotypic reconstruction of all blastomeres in four-cell human embryo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2012-12, Vol.3 (1), p.1251-1251, Article 1251
Hauptverfasser: Chavez, Shawn L., Loewke, Kevin E., Han, Jinnuo, Moussavi, Farshid, Colls, Pere, Munne, Santiago, Behr, Barry, Reijo Pera, Renee A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Previous studies have demonstrated that aneuploidy in human embryos is surprisingly frequent with 50–80% of cleavage-stage human embryos carrying an abnormal chromosome number. Here we combine non-invasive time-lapse imaging with karyotypic reconstruction of all blastomeres in four-cell human embryos to address the hypothesis that blastomere behaviour may reflect ploidy during the first two cleavage divisions. We demonstrate that precise cell cycle parameter timing is observed in all euploid embryos to the four-cell stage, whereas only 30% of aneuploid embryos exhibit parameter values within normal timing windows. Further, we observe that the generation of human embryonic aneuploidy is complex with contribution from chromosome-containing fragments/micronuclei that frequently emerge and may persist or become reabsorbed during interphase. These findings suggest that cell cycle and fragmentation parameters of individual blastomeres are diagnostic of ploidy, amenable to automated tracking algorithms, and likely of clinical relevance in reducing transfer of embryos prone to miscarriage. Abnormal human embryo development is implicated in the embryo arrest observed during in vitro fertilization. Chavez and colleagues perform time-lapse imaging on human embryos and find that chromosomally abnormal embryos exhibit diverse cell cycle parameters that may contribute to arrest.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms2249