Publications
Molecular human reproductionSep 2024 DOI:
10.1093/molehr/gaae034

Sperm-carried IGF2: Towards the discovery of a spark contributing to embryo growth and development

Cannarella, Rossella; Rando, Oliver J; Condorelli, Rosita A; Chamayou, Sandrine; Romano, Simona; Guglielmino, Antonino; Yin, Qiangzong; Hans, Tobias Gustafsson; Mancuso, Francesca; Arato, Iva; Bellucci, Catia; Luca, Giovanni; Lundy, Scott D; La Vignera, Sandro; Calogero, Aldo E
Product Used
Genes
Abstract
Spermatozoa have been shown to carry key RNAs which, according to animal evidence, seem to play a role in early embryo development. In this context, a potential key growth regulator is insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2), a highly conserved paternally expressed imprinted gene involved in cell growth and proliferation which, recent observations indicate, is expressed in human spermatozoa. We herein hypothesized that sperm IGF2 gene expression and transmission at fertilization is required to support early embryo development. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed sperm IGF2 mRNA levels in the same semen aliquot used for homologous assisted reproductive technique (ART) in infertile couples and correlated these levels with embryo morphokinetics. To find a mechanistic explanation for the observed results, the transcriptomes of blastocysts obtained after injection of Igf2 mRNA in mouse parthenotes were analyzed. Sperm IGF2 mRNA negatively correlated with time of 2-cell stage (t2), t3, t4, t5, and time of expanded blastocyst (tEB), independently of maternal age, body mass index, anti-Müllerian hormone levels and oocyte quality. An IGF2 mRNA index >4.9 predicted the ability of the embryos to reach the blastocyst stage on day 5, with a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 71.6% (AUC 0.845; p 
Product Used
Genes

Related Publications