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Submitted on January 21, 2009
Accepted on June 26, 2009
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Department of Genetics, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri 63110, USA
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: moleyk{at}wustl.edu.
The adverse effects of maternal diabetes on embryo development and pregnancy outcomes have recently been shown to occur as early as the one cell zygote stage. The hypothesis of this study was that maternally inherited mitochondria in oocytes from diabetic mice are abnormal and thus responsible in part for this latency of developmental compromise. In ovulated oocytes from diabetic mice, transmission electron microscopy revealed an alteration in mitochondrial ultrastructure and the quantitative analysis of mtDNA copy number demonstrated an increase. The levels of ATP and TCA cycle metabolites in diabetic oocytes were markedly reduced compared to controls, suggesting a mitochondrial metabolic dysfunction. Abnormal distribution of mitochondria within maturing oocytes also was seen in diabetic mice. Furthermore, oocytes from diabetic mice displayed a higher frequency of spindle defects and chromosome misalignment in meiosis, resulting in increased aneuploidy rates in ovulated oocytes. Collectively, our results suggest that maternal diabetes results in oocyte defects that are transmitted to the fetus by two routes: first, meiotic spindle and chromatin defects result in non-disjunction leading to embryonic aneuploidy; second, structural and functional abnormalities of oocyte mitochondria, through maternal transmission, provide the embryo with a dysfunctional complement of mitochondria that may be propagated during embryogenesis.
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