Abstract
In cleavage-stage embryos, preexisting organelles partition evenly into daughter blastomeres without significant cell growth after symmetric cell division. The presence of mitochondrial DNA within mitochondria and its restricted replication during preimplantation development makes their inheritance particularly important. While chromosomes are precisely segregated by the mitotic spindle, the mechanisms controlling mitochondrial partitioning remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigate the mechanism by which Dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) controls the mitochondrial redistribution and partitioning during embryonic cleavage. Deletion of Drp1 in mouse zygotes causes marked mitochondrial aggregation, and the majority of embryos arrest at the 2-cell stage. Clumped mitochondria are located in the center of mitotic Drp1-depleted zygotes with less uniform distribution, thereby preventing their symmetric partitioning. Asymmetric mitochondrial inheritance is accompanied by functionally inequivalent blastomeres with biased ATP and endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ levels. We also find that marked mitochondrial centration in Drp1-depleted zygotes prevents the assembly of parental chromosomes, resulting in chromosome segregation defects and binucleation. Thus, mitochondrial fragmentation mediated by Drp1 ensure proper organelle positioning and partitioning into functional daughters during the first embryonic cleavage.
Impact statement
Depletion of Dynamin-related protein 1, a key regulator of mitochondrial fission, in mouse zygotes impair symmetric organelle partitioning and chromosome segregation leading to early developmental arrest.
Introduction
Preimplantation development of mammalian embryos consists of a series of symmetric cell divisions without significant cell growth, known as embryonic cleavage, resulting in approximately half of the cytoplasm in each resulting cell, called blastomere. The segregation of maternal content between daughter blastomeres allows rapid proliferation of a single-cell zygote into multicellular organisms. To ensure the correct segregation of cellular content to produce functional daughters, cells must duplicate and apportion their various organelles with high accuracy (Carlton et al., 2020). Chromosomes are assembled and segregated into daughter cells with the formation of mitotic spindles, whereas membrane-bound organelles, such as the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria, are typically generated from existing structures, and both daughters receive a share of these components during cell division. This is particularly important in the case of mitochondria because mitochondria are semi-autonomous organelles that contain their own genome, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Growing oocytes exponentially increase their mtDNA, and a fully grown oocyte contains more than 200 000 copies of mtDNA (Mahrous et al., 2012). After fertilization, abundant preexisting mtDNA is segregated among daughter cells without replication during preimplantation development (Poulton et al., 2010). As mitochondria are the primary source of ATP production via oxidative phosphorylation in oocytes and early embryos owing to low glycolytic activity (Dumollard et al., 2007), proper inheritance must be ensured for cell energetic homogeneity among blastomeres. Mitochondria also play an important role in the regulation of intracellular Ca2+ signaling, which in turn controls cell metabolism and cell death pathways (Rizzuto et al., 2012). Thus, defects in mitochondrial inheritance are likely to have serious consequences for daughter blastomeres and manifest as the failure of pre- or post-implantation development.
Mitochondria are highly dynamic organelles that move along cytoskeletal networks and undergo continuous fusion and fission; these dynamics allow cells to respond and adapt to various intracellular and extracellular changes and maintain cellular function and homeostasis (Mishra and Chan, 2014; Westermann, 2010). Active partitioning of mitochondria is observed in budding yeast fission, which undergoes asymmetric cell division; mitochondria actively move along actin filaments into the daughter cell (Mishra and Chan, 2014). In mammalian cells that divide symmetrically, the partitioning of mitochondria is largely due to passive processes, as fragmented and dispersed mitochondrial distribution allows for stochastic and roughly equal partitioning into daughter cells. Mitochondrial fission is thus important for faithful inheritance and proper intracellular distribution of the mitochondria (Westermann, 2010). Whether active transport of mitochondria by the cytoskeleton contributes to mitochondrial inheritance in dividing animal cells remains controversial. Microtubules function as cytoskeletal platforms for the distribution and transport of mitochondria. During mitosis, mitochondria decouple from spindle microtubules and disperse in the cell periphery, allowing for passive segregation (Chung et al., 2016). Furthermore, recent studies have shown that actin filaments took over as the dominant mitochondrial scaffold following mitochondrial release from microtubules at the start of mitosis (Moore et al., 2021). Myosin 19 (Myo19), a mitochondrial-localized myosin in vertebrates, acts as an actin-based motor for mitochondrial dynamics. Notably, depletion of Myo19 causes asymmetrical mitochondrial inheritance between daughter cells (Rohn et al., 2014), though the molecular identification of Myo19 in mammalian oocytes/eggs has yet to be shown.
Dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) is a key regulator of mitochondrial fission in many eukaryotic organisms. Drp1 is recruited to the mitochondrial membrane where it forms helical oligomers that induce membrane constriction and severing (Westermann, 2010). The indispensable role of Drp1-mediated mitochondrial fission in mammalian oocytes has been documented using conditional knockout (KO) mice (Udagawa et al., 2014). Drp1 KO oocytes undergo meiotic arrest due to severe organelle aggregation, which hinders the functional importance of Drp1 in mature oocytes and embryos. More recently, mature oocytes have been successfully isolated from juvenile Drp1 conditional KO mice (Adhikari et al., 2022). After parthenogenetic activation of Drp1 KO oocytes, few embryos develop to the blastocyst stage. Nevertheless, the precise role of mitochondrial fission in normal embryos remains elusive. To this end, we employed Trim-Away, a method to degrade endogenous proteins via the proteasome-mediated pathway (Clift et al., 2017), which acutely depletes large amounts of storage proteins in the oocyte, allowing loss-of-function studies during the preimplantation development from the zygotic stage. In this study, we show that Drp1 depletion in fertilized zygotes causes marked mitochondrial aggregation and early embryonic arrest. Live imaging of mitochondria during the first cleavage division reveals that loss of Drp1 disturbs the spatiotemporal mitochondrial dynamics, resulting in an asymmetric mitochondrial inheritance between daughter blastomeres with functional heterogeneities. We also find that misplaced mitochondria impair the assembly of parental spindles leading to binucleated blastomeres, which closely resemble a clinical phenotype of human embryos in in vitro fertilization (IVF) procedures.
Results
Fragmented mitochondria are redistributed during the first embryonic cleavage and equally partitioned into daughter blastomeres
We first imaged mitochondria and chromosomes in zygotes expressing mitochondrially-targeted GFP (mt-GFP) and histone H2B-mCherry (Figure 1A; Figure 1-Video 1). Mitochondria in interphase zygotes progressively accumulated around the two pronuclei (Figure 1B, left), encircled metaphase chromosomes after nuclear envelope breakdown (NEB). During the transition from anaphase to telophase, the cytokinetic furrow constricts the mitochondrial ring that effectively divides the mitochondria approximately equally into the two daughter blastomeres and mitochondria were dispersed throughout the cytoplasm in the interphase 2-cell embryos (Figure 1B, right). Immunofluorescence staining of microtubules also showed mitochondria progressively surround the spindle and disperse back into the cytoplasm after the first cleavage (Figure 1-figure supplement 1A). The accumulation of mitochondria around the spindle is unique to the first cleavage division (Figure 1-figure supplement 1B and 1C), as live imaging of fluorescently labeled microtubules (EB3-GFP) and mitochondria (mt-DsRed) confirmed spindle-associated accumulation of mitochondria in one-cell zygotes, but no evidence of mitochondrial accumulation was observed in the spindles of 2-cell or 4-cell stage embryos. By electron microscopy (EM), we found that these accumulated mitochondria around the metaphase spindle were highly fragmented (Figure 1C). The ERs were also abundantly distributed around the spindle and were in partial contact with the mitochondria, and enriched bundles of actin filaments were found around these organelles.
Interphase zygotes stained with fluorescence-labelled phalloidin displayed that mitochondrial distribution is closely associated with F-actin cytoplasmic meshwork (Figure 1D; Figure 1-figure supplement 1D). This cytoplasmic meshwork was subsequently reorganized around the spindle and increased co-localization with mitochondria (Figure 1E). In interphase 2-cell stage embryos, the F-actin meshwork was seen again, albeit with significantly reduced overlap with mitochondria. To test whether the F-actin is involved in mitochondrial distribution and partitioning, zygotes were treated with 1 μM latrunculin A for 1 hr just after NEB, sufficient to F-actin depolymerization (Figure 1-figure supplement 1E). Disruption of F-actin organization resulted in asymmetric mitochondrial inheritance (Figure 1-figure supplement 1F and 1G), but also increased cell size asymmetry (Figure 1-figure supplement 1H), and these two asymmetries were correlated (Figure 1-figure supplement 1I). Since the role of F-actin in many cellular events, such as cytokinesis, preclude them as targets for experimentally manipulating mitochondrial distribution, we have therefore targeted Myo19 as a strategy to alter the mitochondrial distribution and ask if it is critical for the early development. Asymmetric mitochondrial inheritance has been previously reported in cells lacking Myo19 (Majstrowicz et al., 2021; Moore et al., 2021; Rohn et al., 2014). Myo19 was expressed in both interphase and metaphase zygotes, where its localization was consistent with the mitochondrial distribution (Figure 1F). Acute depletion of Myo19 at the PN stage by Trim-Away was confirmed by Western blot analysis, which was not observed in control zygotes injected with Trim21 mRNA and control IgG (Figure 1G). Myo19 depletion did not affect developmental competence of the embryos to the blastocyst stage (Figure 1H). Unexpectedly, no significant asymmetry was observed in the mitochondrial distribution and partitioning between the daughter blastomeres in Myo19-depleted 2-cell embryos (Figure 1I and 1J). Overall, fragmented mitochondria are closely associated with cytoplasmic F-actin during the first cleavage, but active transport by the actin motor is not directly involved in mitochondrial partitioning.
Loss of Drp1 induces mitochondrial aggregation and disturbs subcellular organelle compartments
The highly fragmented mitochondrial morphology appears to facilitate mitochondrial partitioning during embryonic cleavage. To understand the underlying mechanism of this process, we examined the role of Drp1, a key regulator of mitochondrial fission. Western blot analysis revealed that Drp1 was expressed in PN zygotes, and comparable protein levels were found in the morula stage, whereas their expression was remarkably decreased at the blastocyst stage (Figure 2A). To demonstrate the role of Drp1-mediated mitochondrial fission in preimplantation embryos, we employed Trim-Away. Co-injection of Trim21 mRNA and an antibody against Drp1 into zygotes 20–22 h post hCG reduced the Drp1 protein to nearly undetectable levels by 5 h post-injection at the PN stage, whereas co-injection of Trim21 mRNA and control IgG failed to trigger protein degradation (Figure 2B).
Mitochondria in live 2-cell embryos (37/37) expressing mt-GFP were interspersed throughout the cytoplasm. In contrast, almost all Drp1 Trim-Away embryos (55/57) exhibited marked mitochondrial aggregation that was reversed by ectopic expression of mCherry-tagged Drp1 (mCh-Drp1) (50/53) (Figure 2C and 2D). We confirmed a similar, mitochondrial aggregation occurred in parthenogenetic embryos derived from Drp1 (-/-) parthenotes (Figure 2E). EM images of control 2-cell embryos showed that rounded mitochondria with less developed cristae were dispersed throughout the cytoplasm, whereas swollen or partially elongated mitochondria were aggregated in Drp1-depleted embryos (Figure 2F). The mean length of the long axis of mitochondria in Drp1-depleted embryos (0.67 ± 0.32 μm) was significantly (P < 0.0001) greater than that of control embryos (0.40 ± 0.12 μm) (Figure 2G). To clarify the effects of these morphological changes in mitochondria on their energy production, we compared ATP levels between control and Drp1 Trim-Away embryos at the 2-cell stages. To analyze intracellular ATP concentrations, we expressed a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based ATP biosensor, ATeam AT1.03, with an emission ratio of AT1.03 fluorescence (YFP/CFP) used to estimate ATP levels. ATP levels in Drp1-depleted embryos were indistinguishable from those in the control embryos (Figure 2H). No FRET signal was detected in embryos expressing a mutant version of the ATP probe AT1.03RK that cannot bind ATP.
Recent studies have focused on the interactions between organelles at membrane contact sites (MCSs) and their roles in maintaining cellular homeostasis (Abrisch et al., 2020). The ER is a continuous membrane-bound organelle with MCSs with the plasma membrane, mitochondria, Golgi, and peroxisomes. Since mitochondrial dynamics are spatially coordinated at the ER–mitochondria MCSs, we surmised that mitochondrial aggregation due to the loss of Drp1 would compromise the organization of ER MCSs. To visualize the distribution of mitochondria with other organelles in live embryos, fluorescently tagged ER (ER-mCherry), Golgi (Golgi-mCherry), and peroxisomes (PEX-mCherry) were co-expressed with mt-GFP. The ER was partially confined to the regions of the mitochondrial aggregation in Drp1 Trim-Away embryos, which appeared to disturb the endogenous ER network (Figure 2-figure supplement 1A). In contrast, the subcellular distribution of the Golgi was not clearly altered by Drp1 depletion (Figure 2-figure supplement 1B). Drp1 is also known to regulate peroxisomal fission, as elongated peroxisomes are seen in Drp1-deficient cells (Koch et al., 2003); however, the subcellular distribution of peroxisomes in mammalian embryos has not been reported. The peroxisomes in normal 2-cell embryos showed a punctate distribution in the cytoplasm, whereas these puncta partially aggregated following the Drp1 depletion by Trim-Away (Figure 2-figure supplement 1C), although it appeared to be independent of mitochondria in terms of spatial positioning.
Drp1-mediated mitochondrial fragmentation is required for the symmetric mitochondrial partitioning into two functional daughter blastomeres
To decipher the spatiotemporal regulation of mitochondrial dynamics following the Drp1 depletion, we imaged mitochondria and chromosomes in Drp1 Trim-Away zygotes expressing mt-GFP and histone H2B-mCherry (Figure 3A; Figure 3-Video 1). Clumped mitochondria were located in the center of the metaphase zygotes which resulted in an increase in mitochondrial asymmetry at anaphase (Figure 3B). Live imaging of mitochondria (mt-DsRed) and spindle microtubules (EB3-GFP) revealed compared with the uniform angular positioning of around the spindle observed in control zygotes, mitochondria in Drp1-depleted zygotes lost their uniform distribution (Figure 3-figure supplement 1A and 1B), leading to the mitochondrial asymmetry. The biased inheritance of mitochondria was further validated by the quantification of mtDNA copy number in isolated blastomeres from 2-cell embryos (Figure 3C). The inheritance ratio of mtDNA in daughter blastomeres of control embryos was comparable, whereas Drp1 depletion led to biased mtDNA inheritance. Although Drp1 depletion did not affect intracellular ATP levels in the whole embryo (Figure 2H), we tested if the biased inheritance of mitochondria led to differences in blastomere ATP levels. Using AT1.03, ATP concentration and mitochondrial distribution were simultaneously visualized in blastomeres of 2-cell embryos (Figure 3-figure supplement 1C). Notably, the bias in ATP levels between blastomeres of 2-cell embryos was greater following the Drp1 depletion (Figure 3D). We then quantified mtDNA copy number in each blastomere and found a positive correlation between mtDNA inheritance and ATP levels in the individual blastomeres (Figure 3E).
The presence of ER-mitochondria MCSs may lead to mitochondria-associated ER asymmetry during cleavage. Live imaging of mitochondria and ER showed that part of the ER is confined to mitochondrial aggregation, resulting in asymmetric distribution at the telophase of the first cleavage (Figure 3F; Figure 3-figure supplement 1D; Figure 3-Video 2) which was closely correlated with mitochondrial asymmetry (Figure 3G). No significant asymmetry was observed in the distribution of Golgi or peroxisomes, suggesting that these organelles are not directly confined by mitochondrial location. The ER is the main reservoir of intracellular Ca2+ stores in non-excitable cells. ER-mitochondria MCSs create localized domains of high Ca2+ concentration required for Ca2+ transfer from the ER to the mitochondria, in which the propagation of Ca2+ signals in the mitochondria controls energy metabolism (Rizzuto et al., 2012). To explore whether alterations in the ER and mitochondrial distribution and segregation affect intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis in 2-cell embryos, the Ca2+ response in each blastomere after exposure to thapsigargin (Tg) in Ca2+ free medium, a specific inhibitor of sarco/ER Ca2+-ATPase, was compared between control and Drp1 Trim-Away embryos (Figure 3H and 3I). Drp1 depletion significantly reduced thapsigargin-induced Ca2+-release and also caused significant variability between blastomeres of individual 2-cell embryos which was not seen in controls (Figure 3J). These findings indicate that Drp1 depletion disrupts mitochondrial-ER interaction leading to compromised ER Ca2+ stores and that asymmetric inheritance of ER leads to further variability in Ca2+ stores between daughter blastomeres.
Drp1 is required for the developmental competence of preimplantation embryos
We found that Drp1-depleted zygotes were predominantly arrested at the 2-cell stage and few embryos developed to the blastocyst stage (Figure 4A and 4B). This is a specific effect of Drp1 deletion because none of the internal control conditions increased arrest at the 2-cell stage and arrest was completely reversed by microinjecting Trim-away insensitive exogenous mCh-Drp1 mRNA (Figure 4C). Further, western blot analysis confirmed expression of mCh-Drp1, in conditions where endogenous Drp1 was degraded by Trim-Away (Figure 4D).
More than half of the Drp1 Trim-Away embryos were arrested at the 2-cell stage, the vast majority of which did not enter the following M-phase, as assessed by the presence of the nuclear envelope. Phosphorylated histone H3 (Ser10), localized in the heterochromatin region in G2-phase cells, was detected in 89% (16/18) of arrested embryos following Drp1 depletion (Figure 4-figure supplement 1A), suggesting that the majority of interphase arrests occur in the G2-phase. Since G2/M interphase arrest presumably activates a DNA damage checkpoint, we estimated DNA lesions by immunofluorescence of γH2AX, a widely used marker for DNA damage 46 h post hCG (corresponding to the G2-stage of the 2-cell stage). As expected, the number of γH2AX foci in Drp1-depleted embryos was significantly greater than that in control embryos (Figure 4-figure supplement 1B and 1C). The accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which are generated as byproducts of mitochondrial energy production, increases susceptibility to DNA damage. Intracellular ROS levels, as estimated by H2DCFDA fluorescence, were highly accumulated in mitochondria (Figure 4-figure supplement 1D).
Misplaced mitochondria during the first cleavage division impair the assembly of parental chromosomes leading to binuclear formation
We observed that approximately 30% (17/53) of Drp1 Trim-Away embryos consisted of 3 or 4 blastomeres despite the first cleavage (indicated by arrowheads in Fig. 4B), suggesting that cleavage defects have occurred. Live imaging experiments showed that Drp1 Trim-Away embryos frequently display chromosome segregation defects. As a typical example, two pronuclei frequently fail to reach apposition but continue into mitosis and subsequently enter anaphase leading to binucleate blastomeres in the subsequent 2-cell embryo (Figure 5A; Figure 5-Video 1). Immunostaining of metaphase zygotes showed that 55% (17/31) of Drp1-depleted zygotes formed two independent spindles with clustered microtubule organizing centers (Figure 5B). Both confocal and EM images showed that large mitochondrial clumps occupied the central region in Drp1-depleted zygotes, to which two spindles were separately located (Figure 5-figure supplement 1A and 1B). Tracking of two sets of chromosomes with mitochondria following Drp1 depletion revealed that the mitochondrial aggregation caused by Drp1-depletion sits between the pronuclei and subsequent spindles such that the distance from chromosomes to the centre of the zygote is increased (Figure 5C and 5D). The duration from mitotic entry to chromosome segregation at anaphase was not affected (not shown) but binucleation was observed in 74% (32/43) of Drp1-depleted embryos and in none of the control zygotes (n = 51) (Figure 5E). In addition to the binucleation of blastomeres via dual spindle formation, other cell division abnormalities were apparent. In approximately half (24/43) of the zygotes, multiple cleavage furrows formed between the different sets of chromosomes leading to transient formation of three or four blastomeres, of which 42% (10/24) failed to complete cytokinesis and collapsed back to form binucleated 2-cell embryos (Figure 5-figure supplement 1C and 1D; Figure 5-Video 2). Together, these results suggest that proper control of mitochondrial positioning during mitosis is crucial for assembly into a single spindle, and marked mitochondrial centration causes chromosome segregation defects, leading to binuclear formation.
Discussion
Mechanisms underlying symmetric mitochondrial inheritance in preimplantation embryos
To ensure proper partitioning of intracellular organelles for two functional daughter cells, cells undergo complex and coordinated remodeling of their cytoskeleton and membranes during cell division through mechanisms that are less well understood than chromosomal dynamics. As mitochondria are unique organelles with their own genomes, their biased inheritance is expected to have detrimental effects on daughter cell function. We showed that Drp1 mediates mitochondrial fragmentation and dispersion, enabling symmetric partitioning between daughter blastomeres stochastically, which is indispensable for healthy embryo development (Figure 5F).
Mitochondria that form a morphologically complex network and interact with microtubules at the interphase are rapidly fragmented upon mitotic entry, detached from the microtubules, and redistributed throughout the cytoplasm (Ball and Singer, 1982). Mitochondrial fission is activated via the phosphorylation of Drp1 during mitosis. Two mitotic kinases, CDK1 and Aurora A, activate Drp1, leading to enhanced mitochondrial fission (Yamano and Youle, 2011). As the cell exits mitosis, Drp1 is sumoylated and targeted for degradation to prevent mitochondrial fragmentation (Figueroa-Romero et al., 2009). Although it remains to be investigated whether these cell cycle-dependent modifications of Drp1 also occur in early embryos, mitochondria appear to be constitutively fragmented throughout the cell cycle. This unique mitochondrial morphology not only facilitates symmetric partitioning in cell division without cell growth, but also appears to be well-adapted to the rapid proliferation of single-cell zygotes into multicellular organisms before cell lineages specification. In asymmetrically dividing cells, functionally distinct mitochondria are unequally apportioned to influence daughter cell fate (Katajisto et al., 2015). In contrast, symmetric cell division is intended to produce identical daughter cells with comparable fates. In this context, the highly fragmented mitochondrial morphology in early embryos may contribute to avoid cell fate divergence, as well as fulfill metabolic homogeneity among blastomeres. Interestingly, the apparent morphological changes in mitochondria occur at the blastocyst stage, as elongated mitochondria are formed in trophectoderm (TE) cells, which is likely to be associated with altered energy metabolism in the TE lineage (Kumar et al., 2018). Considering that the transformation from eggs to embryos is a fundamental process in animal development involving changes such as the transition from meiotic to mitotic spindles and maternal to zygotic gene expression, changes in mitochondrial morphology and function may also play a role in regulating cell fate and function in the early embryo.
The cytoskeleton is a critical regulator of organelle positioning. In contrast to a uniformly distributed mitochondria throughout the cytoplasm during somatic cell division (Chung et al., 2016; Moore et al., 2021), mitochondria progressively accumulated around pronuclei and encircle the metaphase spindle of the first embryonic cleavage. Since the two pronuclei migrate from the periphery to the central of the eggs by the F-actin-dependent mechanism to unite chromosomes on the first mitotic spindle (Chaigne et al., 2016; Scheffler et al., 2021), actin filaments may drive the mitochondrial movement. In fact, mitochondrial distribution was closely associated with cytoplasmic F-actin organization in zygotes, especially at the metaphase. Although depolymerization of F-actin prior to metaphase led to asymmetric mitochondrial partitioning, the cell division itself was also asymmetric, probably due to failure of centering of the pronuclei. Given that the depletion of Myo19 did not affect the mitochondrial inheritance between daughter blastomeres, actin-based motor may not contribute the symmetric pertaining of mitochondria in cleavage embryos. This result is mostly consistent with previous observations in mitochondrial Rho GTPase (Miro) 1-deleted zygotes. Miro1 is localized in the mitochondrial outer membrane and the adaptor protein TRAK mediates the attachment of motor proteins to the mitochondria (Lopez-Domenech et al., 2018). Miro also regulates Myo19, ensuring stability to actin-mediated mitochondrial distribution (Lopez-Domenech et al., 2018), and thus loss of Miro leads to asymmetric segregation of mitochondria during mitosis most likely due to reduced levels of Myo19. In Miro1-deleted zygotes, mitochondrial dynamics was partially disturbed, but this did not affect mitochondrial partitioning to daughter blastomeres, and fertility was normal as a result (Lee et al., 2022). Thus, fragmented mitochondria may be primarily important for symmetric mitochondrial partitioning in cleavage embryos, as a less precise stochastic partitioning mechanism may be suitable or sufficient for equally partitioning of mitochondria, which are present in abundance and are located across the cell volume in oocytes/zygotes. Otherwise, other mechanisms may exist that tether mitochondria to the cytoskeletal network in these cells.
The physiological roles of mitochondrial fission in preimplantation embryos
Inhibition of Drp1-mediated mitochondrial fission causes severe embryonic arrest. Given the housekeeping cellular functions of mitochondria, dysregulation of mitochondrial dynamics may exert profound effects on the developmental competence of embryos. Mitochondrial dynamics are a highly regulated process, and when disrupted, can lead to cellular and tissue pathologies. The importance of mitochondrial fission has been intensively studied in animal cells, and emerging evidence suggests that Drp1-mediated fission participates in diverse cellular processes, including ER contacts, Ca2+ signaling, autophagy, and apoptosis (Kraus et al., 2021). Drp1-KO mice are embryonic lethal, most likely due to brain, heart, and placental defects; however, various tissues appear normal, and cultured cell lines continue to proliferate even though mitochondria are unevenly segregated (Ishihara et al., 2009; Wakabayashi et al., 2009). Cells lacking Drp1 have highly elongated mitochondria that cannot be divided into transportable units, and typically accumulate in a limited area, leaving large parts of the cell devoid of mitochondria. This imbalanced distribution of mitochondria may fail to meet local energy demands and thus would be more manifest in large or extended cells, such as neurons and oocytes/zygotes. Moreover, our data demonstrated that Drp1 depletion in cleavage embryos caused biased mitochondrial inheritance and energy heterogeneity between blastomeres. Given the low levels of de novo mtDNA replication during preimplantation development, these biases may be further magnified by cleavage division progression. It is also noteworthy that we showed that the loss of Drp1 induced mitochondrial aggregation disturbs the spatial organization of ER. The aggregated ER subdomains likely caused leakage of Ca2+ stores, which may compromise the tethering functions at the ER MCSs. Furthermore, we found that marked mitochondrial aggregation in Drp1-depleted 2-cell embryos caused the ectopic accumulation of ROS, which presumably led to an increase in DNA lesions. A hyperfused mitochondrial network in Drp1-deficient cells has also been reported to cause replication stress and chromosomal instability during the cell cycle, leading to DNA damage response (Qian et al., 2012). Although the precise mechanisms of 2-cell stage arrest arising from depletion of Drp1 remain elusive, the presence of a Chk1-dependent checkpoint leading to G2 arrest in 2-cell mouse embryos (Ladstatter and Tachibana-Konwalski, 2016) suggests that the surveillance mechanism may involve this process.
In the present study, we found frequent binucleation in Drp1-depleted embryos. Binucleation of early embryos is relatively common in human IVF procedures, but the mechanisms of its occurrence and association with the developmental competence of the embryo are not fully understood (Gomes Paim and FitzHarris, 2020). Reichmann et al. recently demonstrated that mouse zygotes form two functionally independent spindles before anaphase, and spatially separate parental genomes during the first cleavage (Reichmann et al., 2018). Notably, failure to align the two spindles produced errors, resulting in binuclear formation in the 2-cell embryos. The present study demonstrates that clustered mitochondria in the central space of zygotes interfere with the assembly of two spindles, implying a potential contribution of the organelle misplacement to binucleation in human embryos.
Mitochondrial dynamics and quality control
The present study revealed the response to defective mitochondrial fission at the cellular level in early embryos, but the response at the organelle level remains to be elucidated. Mitochondria in oocytes, with hundreds of thousands of mtDNA copies, are maternally inherited after fertilization. The preservation and apportionment of healthy mtDNA in oocytes and early embryos is important for the inheritance of normal mtDNA in the offspring. Recent full-length mtDNA sequencing has identified de novo mtDNA mutations in oocytes, and their frequency increases with age, implying mtDNA turnover during meiotic arrest (Abrisch et al., 2020). Oocytes with severe mtDNA mutations can be eliminated (Fan et al., 2008), although the thresholds at which mtDNA mutations and the resulting mitochondrial dysfunction result in selection remain unclear. The autophagic elimination of mitochondria and mitophagy may also function as filters to segregate and eliminate pathogenic mtDNA mutations at the organelle level (Youle and van der Bliek, 2012). An attractive model has been proposed for the Drosophila female germline, as fragmentation of the mitochondrial network facilitates mitophagy and allows selective elimination of defective mitochondria containing mutant mtDNA (Lieber et al., 2019). Functional links between mitochondrial fission and removal of damaged mitochondria by mitophagy have also been documented in mammalian cells, as Drp1 deficiency causes mitochondrial dysfunction owing to the failure of a Drp1-dependent mechanism of mitophagy that removes damaged mitochondria within the cell (Twig et al., 2008). The highly fragmented mitochondrial structure in mammalian oocytes/zygotes allows mtDNA to be sequestered in small units, which may be beneficial for eliminating mutation-impaired mitochondria for mitophagy. Furthermore, symmetric segregation of fragmented mitochondria might randomize mutant mtDNA among daughter blastomeres during embryonic cleavage to maintain tissue homeostasis. Elucidating the behavior of mutant mitochondria in early embryos is clinically meaningful. Mitochondrial replacement therapy (MRT) is a promising approach to prevent the transmission of mtDNA disorders from mother to child, as pathogenic mutant mtDNA in mature oocytes or zygotes is replaced with normal mtDNA by nuclear transfer (Hyslop et al., 2016; Kang et al., 2016). A potential problem with MRT is that a small fraction of patients’ mtDNA is inevitably carried over into the reconstructed oocytes or zygotes (approximately 1 to 4%, respectively). It has been noted that these low levels of mutant mtDNA may predominantly expand during post-implantation embryogenesis, suggesting a rapid shift to one mtDNA haplotype during early development (Lee et al., 2012). Therefore, it is important to investigate the role of mitochondrial dynamics in the regulation of mtDNA mutations in the preimplantation embryo, and whether mitochondrial fission contributes to reducing the mutational load.
Materials and methods
Preparation of zygotes
Zygotes were collected from the oviducts of 8-to 12-week-old BDF1 female mice mated with 3-to 6-month-old BDF1 male mice. Females were superovulated by intraperitoneal injection of 7.5 IU of equine chorionic gonadotropin (PMSG; ASKA Pharmaceutical, Tokyo, Japan) followed by injection of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG; ASKA Pharmaceutical) 48 h later. Female mice were euthanized 20-24 h later and fertilized zygotes were retrieved in Hepes-buffered KSOM (H-KSOM) medium under paraffin oil, at 37°C in a humidified atmosphere containing 5% CO2. All mice were housed in a pathogen-free environment in filter-top cages and fed a standard diet. Animal experiments were conducted according to the guidelines of the Animal Care and Use Committee of Okayama University.
For experiments in Fig. 3C, Drp1loxP/loxP mice (Wakabayashi et al., 2009) were crossed with transgenic mice that carried Gdf-9 promoter–mediated Cre recombinase. After multiple rounds of crossing, homozygous Drp1cKO female mice lacking Drp1 in oocytes (Drp1loxP/loxP; Gdf9-Cre) or Drp1Δ/Δ oocytes were obtained. Mice that do not carry the Cre transgene are referred to as Drp1loxP/loxP and were used as controls. For collection of ovulated MII oocytes, mice were superovulated by sequential intraperitoneal injections of 8-IU PMSG and 8-IU hCG at an interval of 48 hours, and the mice were culled 14 to 16 hours after hCG injection to collect oocytes from oviducts. Animal experimentation was approved by Monash University Animal Experimentation Ethics Committee and was performed in accordance with Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Guidelines on Ethics in Animal Experimentation.
Plasmids
EGFP, mCherry, and DsRed were cloned into pcDNA6 vector between the XhoI and XbaI sites (pcDNA6/Myc-His B; Invitrogen, Waltham, MA) with a poly(A)-tail of 84 nucleotides (Wakai et al., 2014). The gene sequence encoding the mitochondrial targeting sequence of Cox VIII was amplified by PCR and ligated to the EGFP and DsRed-bearing pcDNA6 (mt-GFP and mt-DsRed). The gene sequences encoding the ER-targeting sequence of calreticulin and the KDEL ER retention sequence were cloned into mCherry (ER-mCherry)-bearing pcDNA6. For visualization of DNA and microtubule growth, gene sequences encoding histones H2B and EB3 were ligated to the pcDNA6 vector in frame with mCherry (H2B-mCherry) and EGFP (EB3-GFP), respectively. The gene sequences encoding the amino-terminal 33 residues of endothelial nitric-oxide synthase as a Golgi targeting sequence (Addgene, 14873) and peroximal targeting signal 1 (Addgene, 54520) were cloned into mCherry-bearing pcDNA6 (Golgi-mCherry and PEX-mCherry). The gene sequences encoding N-terminally mCherry tagged Drp1 (Addgene, 49152) were inserted between the EcoRI and PstI sites of the pCDNA vector (mCherry-Drp1). ATP biosensor, AT1.03 and AT1.03RK in the pcDNA3.1 vector were kindly provided by Dr H. Imamura (Kyoto University). Capped mRNA was synthesized with T7 polymerase (RiboMAX Large-Scale RNA Production, Promega, Madison, WI) according to manufacturer instructions. mRNAs were delivered into zygotes using a piezo-driven micropipette unit (Prime Tech, Tsuchiura, Japan). For microinjection, mRNA solution was loaded into glass micropipettes at the concentration of 200 ng/µl (mt-GFP, EB3-GFP, mt-DsRed, H2B-mCherry, ER-mCherry, Golgi-mCherry, and PEX-mCherry), 500 ng/µl (mCheery-Drp1) or 1000 ng/µl (AT1.03 and AT1.03RK). The volumes injected typically ranged from 2 to 10 pl, which is 1–5% of that of the oocytes. Manipulation was carried out in H-KSOM medium containing 5 mg/mL cytochalasin B (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) to increase post-microinjection survival.
Trim-Away
Trim-Away was performed as previously described with some modifications. In brief, pCMV6-Entry vector harboring Trim-21 mouse ORF Clone (Origene, Rockville, MD) was linearized by FseI, and mRNA was synthesized using T7 mMessage mMachine and poly-A tailed with Poly(A) tailing kit (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA). Mouse monoclonal anti-Drp1 antibody (BD Biosciences, Franklin Lakes, NJ) or rabbit monoclonal anti-Myo19 antibody (Abcam, Cambridge, UK) was concentrated using Amicon Ultra-0.5 100 KDa centrifugal filter devices (Millipore, Bedford, MA) and the buffer was replaced with PBS containing 0.03% NP40 (Nakarai, Kyoto, Japan). Pronuclear stage zygotes were injected with Trim21 mRNA (1000 ng/mL) and subsequently anti-Drp1 or anti-Myo19 antibodies. For the control experiment, normal mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Dallas, TX) and rabbit IgG (Cell Signaling Technology, Danvers, MA) was used instead of an anti-Drp1 antibody and anti-Myo19 antibodies, respectively.
Western blotting
Whole cell lysates from zygotes/embryos were prepared by adding a 2× sample buffer. Proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and transferred to PVDF membranes (Millipore). The membranes were then blocked and probed with anti-Drp1 (1:1000) or anti-Myo19 (1:1000) antibodies for 1 h at room temperature. Goat anti-mouse antibody conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was used as a secondary antibody (1:2000) for chemiluminescence detection (Clarity Western ECL Substrates, Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The signal was digitally captured using a ChemiDoc XRS+ imaging system (Bio-Rad). The same membranes were stripped at 50°C for 30 min (62.5 mM Tris, 2% SDS, and 100 mM 2-beta mercaptoethanol) and re-probed with anti-β-actin monoclonal antibody (1:2000, Cell Signaling Technology) as the internal control.
mtDNA copy number
The zona pellucida of 2-cell embryos was removed with H-KSOM medium containing 0.1% protease (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). Individual blastomeres from the zona-free embryos were obtained by repeatedly pipetting in Ca2+-free and Ma2+-free H-KOSM medium. After washing in PBS, each blastomere was transferred into 15 μL of lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.5, with 0.5% Tween 20 and 100 μg proteinase K, at 55°C, followed by heat inactivation at 95°C for 10 min. The plasmid standard was constructed by cloning a 194-bp fragment of the NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase chain 1. The standard stock was serially diluted to prepare the standard curve (103 to 107). Real-time fluorescence-monitored quantitative PCR using the primer pair 5′-CCTATC ACCCTTGCCA-3′ and 5′-GAGGCTGTTGCTTGTG-3′ was performed on a LightCycler 96 System (Roche, Basel, Switzerland). Each reaction of 20 µL consisted of 10 µL of SYBR Green I (Roche), 0.5 µM each of the forward and reverse primers, and 5 µL of diluted DNA template. The cycling conditions were as follows: initial denaturation at 95°C for 5 min followed by 45 cycles of denaturation at 95°C for 10 sec, annealing at 50°C for 20 sec, and elongation at 72°C for 8 sec. Standard curves were created for each run, and the sample copy number was determined from the equation relating the Ct value against copy number for the corresponding standard curve.
Immunofluorescence
Zygotes/embryos were fixed and permeabilized with 2% paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 0.1% Triton X-100 for 40 min at room temperature. After washing with PBS supplemented with 1% bovine serum albumin (PBS–BSA), the zygotes/embryos were incubated overnight at 4°C with mouse anti-α-tubulin (1:300, Sigma), rabbit monoclonal anti-Myo19 antibody (1:300, Abcam), rabbit anti-pericentrin (1:500, Abcam) or mouse monoclonal Anti-γH2A.X (1:500, Abcam) antibodies in PBS–BSA. Then zygotes/embryos were washed with PBS–BSA and incubated with Alexa Fluor488-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:300) for 1 h at room temperature. DNA was stained with DAPI. Samples were placed on the medium under mineral oil in glass bottom dishes (Matsunami, Osaka, Japan) and examined using a laser-scanning confocal microscope (FV1200, Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) outfitted with a 63 × 1.4 NA oil immersion objective lens.
Mitochondrial and ROS staining
Mitochondrial distribution was analyzed by staining with 1 µM MitoTracker Red CM-H2XRos (Thermo Fisher Scientific) in H-KSOM medium for 30 min at 37°C. Intracellular ROS levels were analyzed using 5 µM H2DCFDA (Thermo Fisher Scientific) in H-KSOM medium for 15 min at 37°C. The embryos were placed in drops of H-KSOM medium under mineral oil in glass bottom dishes (Matsunami), and fluorescence images of MitoTracker Red CMXros and H2DCFDA were obtained using a laser-scanning confocal microscope (FV1200) fitted with a 63 × 1.4 NA oil-immersion objective lens.
Electron microscopy
Zygotes/embryos were fixed in 2% glutaraldehyde in a 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) for 1 h and stored at 4°C until processed. After post-fixation in 2% osmium tetroxide at 4°C, the specimens were dehydrated with a graded series of ethanol and were embedded in epoxy resin Quetol-812. Semi-thin sections were cut for light microscopy and stained with toluidine blue for further sectioning of areas. Thereafter, ultra-thin sections were cut and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate and examined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) (JEM 1200EX, JEOL) at 80 kV.
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer and Ca2+ imaging
ATeam, a fluorescence resonance energy transfer-based ATP indicator, has been used successfully to measure cellular ATP levels in live somatic cells (Imamura et al., 2009). To estimate the relative changes in ATP levels, the emission ratio of AT1.03 and AT1.03RK (YFP/CFP) was imaged using a CFP excitation filter, dichroic beam splitter, and CFP and YFP emission filters (Chroma Technology, Rockingham, VT; ET436/20x, 89007bs, ET480/40m and ET535/30m). To measure cytoplasmic Ca2+, embryos were incubated with 1.25 µM Fluo-4 (Thermo Fisher Scientific) supplemented with 0.02% pluronic acid (Thermo Fisher Scientific) for 20 min at room temperature. Fluo-4 was excited with 480 nm wavelengths every 20 seconds and emitted light was collected at wavelengths greater than 510 nm. To estimate Ca2+ levels in the ER, Ca2+ rise was analyzed following the addition of 10 μM thapsigargin (Sigma) in a Ca2+-free medium. For the monitoring of ATP and Ca2+ levels, embryos were attached to glass-bottomed dishes (Matsunami) and placed on the stage of an inverted microscope. . The fluorescence images were obtained by a scientific CMOS (sCMOS) camera (Hamamatsu Photonics, Hamamatsu), and the rotation of excitation and emission filter wheels was controlled using the MAC5000 filter wheel/shutter control box (Ludl Electronic Products Ltd, Hawthorne, NY) and HCImage software.
Live cell confocal imaging
Spinning disk images of mitochondria (mt-GFP and mt-DsRed), chromosomes (H2B-mCherry), microtubules (EB3-GFP), ER (ER-mCherry), Golgi (Golgi-mCherry) and peroxisome (PEX-mCherry) and were obtained using a confocal scanner unit (CellVoyager CV1000, Yokogawa, Tokyo, Japan) equipped with a C-Apochromat ×40, 1.2 NA water immersion objective. Images were typically acquired every 10-20 mins on 10 planes covering a 35-40 μm range (every 2.5-3.3 μm). Laser wavelengths of 488 and 561 nm were used for the excitation of EGFP and mCherry (DsRed), respectively (not exceeding 0.2% laser intensity to minimize light-induced phototoxic stress).
Image analysis
Fiji (Schindelin et al., 2012) was used for quantification of fluorescence images.
For quantification of mitochondria at nuclear or spindle periphery in Figure 1B and Figure-1 figure supplement 1C, the fluorescence images of nucleus (H2B-mCherry) of spindle (EB3-GFP) were applied with a Gaussian filter (radius: 2 pixels) to remove noise and segmented by intensity thresholding. The masked binary images were dilated with 10 pixels width and the nucleus/spindle periphery was segmented by the subtraction of the original image from the dilated image. The fluorescence intensity ratio of mitochondrial layers at the periphery to that of outside periphery was measured to estimate mitochondrial accumulation around the nucleus/spindle.
For quantitation of mitochondrial symmetry at the anaphase in Figure 3B, the cleavage plane of dividing blastomere was manually outlined with respect to the middle of the anaphase chromosomes. Total mito-GFP intensity in each blastomere was measured, and the greater value was divided by the smaller value for the symmetry index. To analyze organelle symmetry at the telophase in Figure 3F, total pixel intensity in the channel corresponding to mito-GFP, ER-mCherry, Golgi-mCherry and PEX-mCherry in each blastomere was measured. The greater value was divided by the smaller value; a ratio of 1 indicates symmetry, whereas higher values indicate asymmetry.
Uniformity analysis of mitochondrial distribution around spindles in y in Figure 3-figure supplement 1B was performed based on the angular distributions of mitochondria (mt-DsRed) and microtubules (EB3-GFP) using “QuantEv Icy” plugin (Pecot et al., 2018). The fluorescence images were applied with a Gaussian filter to reduce noise, and xy coordinates were converted to polar coordinates. The fluorescence intensity profiles for mt-DsRed relative to the centroid of the EB3-GFP signals was divided into sectors each 60 degree based on the long axis of the spindle. The standard deviation of averaged mitochondrial intensity per 60° sector were calculated, higher values were considered to indicate increased non-uniformity.
For tracking nuclei in zygotes in Figure 5C and 5D, XY coordinates of the centroid of male and female chromosomes (H2B-macherry) relative to the center of the zygote were obtained using “Manual tracking” plugin. Only the zygotes with nuclei that remained in the focal plane were analyzed.
Statistical analysis
All statistical analyses were performed using GraphPad Prism software. Values from three or more experiments performed on different batches of cells were analyzed by Statistical tests and p-values are indicated in figures and figure legends.
Resource availability
All unique/stable reagents and plasmids generated in this study are available from the lead contact with a completed Materials Transfer Agreement. Further information and requests for resources and reagents should be directed to and will be fulfilled by the lead contact, Takuya Wakai (t2wakai@okayama-u.ac.jp).
Acknowledgements
We thank Dr. H. Imamura (Kyoto University) for sharing AT1.03 and AT1.03RK plasmids. We thank Sayaka Nakato for technical assistance. We thank the Division of Instrumental Analysis, Okayama University for the experiments using FV1200 and gratefully thank the staff of Mio Fertility Clinic for technical assistance with CellVoyager CV1000.
Funding information
1) Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (Grant reference: 17K17905 and 20K06627): Takuya Wakai
National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Australia (Grant reference: 1165627): Deepak Adhikari and John Carroll
The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.
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