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2 result(s) for "Van Daele, Jessie"
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Oocytes with impaired meiotic maturation contain increased mtDNA deletions
Purpose Induction of meiotic competence is a major goal of the controlled ovarian stimulation used in ART. Do factors intrinsic to the oocyte contribute to oocyte maturation? Deletions in mtDNA accumulate in long-lived post mitotic tissues and are found in human oocytes. If oogenesis cleanses the germline of deleterious deletions in mtDNA, meiotically competent oocytes should contain lower levels of mtDNA deletions vs. meiotically arrested oocytes. We tested this hypothesis using a novel PCR assay for a deletion ratio in human oocytes derived from IVF. Methods A real-time PCR assay was developed to measure total mtDNA copy number (mtDNA CN ) and mtDNA harboring the 5 Kb “common deletion” to enable calculation of the mtDNA deletion ratio (mtDNA DR ) in 143 cultured oocytes. Kruskal-Wallis test was carried out to compare the total mtDNA CN and the mtDNA DR among oocytes which matured to metaphase II (MII) vs. oocytes arrested at GV or metaphase I (MI). Results 51.75% of oocytes reached MII, and 17% remained at MI. Mean mtDNADR in GV, MI and MII oocytes were 27.87%, 31.88% and 20.05%, respectively. The difference in deletion ratios between GV and MII and between MI and MII stages was statistically significant p  < 0.001 and p  = 0.034, respectively. Additionally, patient age was found to be positively correlated with time to Polar body extrusion (− 0.278 Pearson correlation). Conclusions Oocytes with impaired meiotic maturation contain an increased load of mtDNA deletions. This is the first report of an association between the mtDNA deletion ratio and human oocyte maturation in vitro.
Xenografted human microglia display diverse transcriptomic states in response to Alzheimer’s disease-related amyloid-β pathology
Microglia are central players in Alzheimer’s disease pathology but analyzing microglial states in human brain samples is challenging due to genetic diversity, postmortem delay and admixture of pathologies. To circumvent these issues, here we generated 138,577 single-cell expression profiles of human stem cell-derived microglia xenotransplanted in the brain of the App NL-G-F model of amyloid pathology and wild-type controls. Xenografted human microglia adopt a disease-associated profile similar to that seen in mouse microglia, but display a more pronounced human leukocyte antigen or HLA state, likely related to antigen presentation in response to amyloid plaques. The human microglial response also involves a pro-inflammatory cytokine/chemokine cytokine response microglia or CRM response to oligomeric Aβ oligomers. Genetic deletion of TREM2 or APOE as well as APOE polymorphisms and TREM2 R47H expression in the transplanted microglia modulate these responses differentially. The expression of other Alzheimer’s disease risk genes is differentially regulated across the distinct cell states elicited in response to amyloid pathology. Thus, we have identified multiple transcriptomic cell states adopted by human microglia in a multipronged response to Alzheimer’s disease-related pathology, which should be taken into account in translational studies. Human microglia transplanted in the mouse brain mount a multipronged response to amyloid-β pathology, displaying unique transcriptional states. Alzheimer’s disease risk genes are differentially regulated across cell states and profoundly alter microglial function.