- NLRP7 and KHDC3L, the two maternal-effect proteins responsible for recurrent hydatidiform moles, co-localize to the oocyte cytoskeleton.
NLRP7 and KHDC3L, the two maternal-effect proteins responsible for recurrent hydatidiform moles, co-localize to the oocyte cytoskeleton.
What is the subcellular localization in human oocytes and preimplantation embryos, of the two maternal-effect proteins, NLRP7 and KHDC3L, responsible for recurrent hydatidiform moles (RHMs)? NLRP7 and KHDC3L localize to the oocyte cytoskeleton and are polar and absent from the cell-to-cell contact region in early preimplantation embryos. NLRP7 and KHDC3L expression has been described at the RNA level in some stages of human oocytes and preimplantation embryos and at the protein level by immunohistochemistry in human and bovine ovaries. NLRP7 and KHDC3L co-localize to the microtubule organizing center and/or the Golgi apparatus in human hematopoietic cells. A total of 164 spare human oocytes and embryos from patients undergoing in vitro fertilization were used. Oocytes and early cleavage-stage embryos were fixed, immunostained with NLRP7 and/or KHDC3L antibodies, and analyzed using high-resolution confocal immunofluorescence and electron microscopies. NLRP7 and KHDC3L localize to the cytoskeleton and are predominant at the cortical region in growing oocytes. After the first cellular division, these two maternal-effect proteins become asymmetrically confined to the outer cortical region and excluded from the cell-to-cell contact region until the blastocyst stage where NLRP7 and KHDC3L homogeneously redistribute to the cytoplasm and the nucleus, respectively. We could not analyze fresh human oocytes and embryos. The analyzed materials were donated by patients undergoing assisted reproductive technologies and released for research 1-3 days after their collection and the transfer of embryos to the patients. Our study is the first comprehensive and high-resolution localization of the only two known maternal-effect proteins, NLRP7 and KHDC3L, in human oocytes and preimplantation embryos. Our data contribute to a better understanding of the roles of these two proteins in the integrity of the oocytes, post-zygotic divisions, and cell-lineage differentiation. This work was supported by the Canadian Institute of Health Research (86546 to R.S.); E.A. was supported by fellowships from the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre and a CREATE award from the Réseau Québécois en Reproduction. All authors declare no conflict of interest.