Molecular Medicine Israel

8C-like cells capture the human zygotic genome activation program in vitro

Highlights

ZGA genes and transposable elements are expressed in 8CLCs but not in naive stem cells•

DUX4 overexpression and spliceosome inhibition induce ZGA-like transcription•

8CLC marker proteins TPRX1 and H3.Y are expressed in 8-cell human embryos•

8CLCs can be used to study human ZGA-like programs in vitro

Summary

The activation of the embryonic genome marks the first major wave of transcription in the developing organism. Zygotic genome activation (ZGA) in mouse 2-cell embryos and 8-cell embryos in humans is crucial for development. Here, we report the discovery of human 8-cell-like cells (8CLCs) among naive embryonic stem cells, which transcriptionally resemble the 8-cell human embryo. They express ZGA markers, including ZSCAN4 and LEUTX, and transposable elements, such as HERVL and MLT2A1. 8CLCs show reduced SOX2 levels and can be identified using TPRX1 and H3.Y marker proteins in vitro. Overexpression of the transcription factor DUX4 and spliceosome inhibition increase human ZGA-like transcription. Excitingly, the 8CLC markers TPRX1 and H3.Y are also expressed in ZGA-stage 8-cell human embryos and may thus be relevant in vivo. 8CLCs provide a unique opportunity to characterize human ZGA-like transcription and might provide critical insights into early events in embryogenesis in humans.

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