m6A-dependent maternal mRNA clearance facilitates zebrafish maternal-to-zygotic transition
Authors
06-07-2017
12:00pm
PST
Abstract
The maternal-to-zygotic transition (MZT) is one of the most profound and tightly orchestrated processes during the early life of embryos, yet factors that shape the temporal pattern of vertebrate MZT are largely unknown. Here we show that over one-third of zebrafish maternal messenger RNAs (mRNAs) can be N6 -methyladenosine (m6 A) modified, and the clearance of these maternal mRNAs is facilitated by an m6 A-binding protein, Ythdf2. Removal of Ythdf2 in zebrafish embryos decelerates the decay of m6 A-modified maternal mRNAs and impedes zygotic genome activation. These embryos fail to initiate timely MZT, undergo cellcycle pause, and remain developmentally delayed throughout larval life. Our study reveals m6 A-dependent RNA decay as a previously unidentified maternally driven mechanism that regulates maternal mRNA clearance during zebrafish MZT, highlighting the critical role of m6 A mRNA methylation in transcriptome switching and animal development.