TEAD4 regulates trophectoderm differentiation upstream of CDX2 in a GATA3-independent manner in the human preimplantation embryo

Jun 14, 2022Human reproduction (Oxford, England)

TEAD4 controls early outer cell development before CDX2 without relying on GATA3 in human embryos

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Abstract

100% of the mouse embryos (55 out of 55) targeted for Tead4 exhibited genetic modifications from CRISPR-Cas9 editing.

  • TEAD4 regulates differentiation of trophectoderm cells in human preimplantation embryos, acting upstream of the protein CDX2.
  • In contrast to mice, human embryos retain GATA3 expression after TEAD4 targeting, suggesting different regulatory interactions.
  • Mouse embryos targeted for Tead4 showed reduced developmental capacity, with 44.17% arrested at the morula stage compared to 8.51% in controls.
  • Human embryos reached the blastocyst stage at a rate of 25.00%, similar to controls, but displayed compromised quality in trophectoderm structure.
  • The absence of TEAD4 and CDX2 in targeted human embryos indicates significant alterations in trophectoderm lineage markers.

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