Age-related meiotic segregation errors in mammalian oocytes are preceded by depletion of cohesin and Sgo2

  • Lisa Martine Lister
  • , Anna Kouznetsova
  • , Louise Ann Hyslop
  • , Dimitrios Kalleas
  • , Sarah Louise Pace
  • , Jaclyn Catharina Barel
  • , Abinaya Nathan
  • , Vasileios Floros
  • , Caroline Adelfalk
  • , Yoshinori Watanabe
  • , Rolf Jessberger
  • , Thomas B. Kirkwood
  • , Christer Höög
  • , Mary Herbert

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

300 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: The growing trend for women to postpone childbearing has resulted in a dramatic increase in the incidence of trisomic pregnancies. Maternal age-related miscarriage and birth defects are predominantly a consequence of chromosome segregation errors during the first meiotic division (MI), which involves the segregation of replicated recombined homologous chromosomes. Despite the importance to human reproductive health, the events precipitating female age-related meiotic errors are poorly understood. Results: Here we use a long-lived wild-type mouse strain to show that the ability to segregate chromosomes synchronously during anaphase of MI declines dramatically during female aging. This is preceded by depletion of chromosome-associated cohesin in association with destabilization of chiasmata, the physical linkages between homologous chromosomes, and loss of the tight association between sister centromeres. Loss of cohesin is not due to an age-related decline in the ability of the spindle checkpoint to delay separase-mediated cleavage of cohesin until entry into anaphase I. However, we find that reduced cohesin is accompanied by depletion of Sgo2, which protects centromeric cohesin during MI. Conclusions: The data indicate that cohesin declines gradually during the long prophase arrest that precedes MI in female mammals. In aged oocytes, cohesin levels fall below the level required to stabilize chiasmata and to hold sister centromeres tightly together, leading to chromosome missegregation during MI. Cohesin loss may be amplified by a concomitant decline in the levels of the centromeric cohesin protector Sgo2. These findings indicate that cohesin is a key molecular link between female aging and chromosome missegregation during MI.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1511-1521
Number of pages11
JournalCurrent Biology
Volume20
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - 14 Sep 2010
Externally publishedYes

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