Periodic Reporting for period 1 - HOTIMAGE (HOst-Transposon Interactions in the MAle GErmline)
Período documentado: 2023-06-01 hasta 2025-11-30
Indeed, reproductive cells represent a critical battlefield for this host–TE interplay. For TEs, germ cells are the gateway to immortality: only insertions in this lineage ensure vertical inheritance and propagation. For the host, however, unchecked germline TE activity is catastrophic, introducing heritable mutations that can compromise reproduction and species fitness. Paradoxically, mammalian germline development involves a programmed phase of epigenetic reprogramming during which DNA methylation—the primary defense against TEs—is erased genome-wide. This transient relaxation permits TE transcription, yet genomic invasion does not occur. If, however, this permissive window extends beyond its natural boundaries, meiosis is compromised, leading to germ cell collapse and infertility.
The HOTIMAGE project seeks to unravel the molecular mechanisms that integrate TEs into the mammalian germline program and to assess their impact on fertility, using the mouse as a model. We aim to elucidate how TEs are distinguished from genes and how the successive phases of spermatogenesis are protected from their deleterious effects. Ultimately, this work will provide a new conceptual framework for the role of TEs in shaping male gamete production, with far-reaching implications for the etiology of fertility disorders.
In 1), using whole genome profiling of DNA methylation and TE-associated chromatin marks, we revealed a previously unrecognized hierarchical organization underlying the sequential silencing of various TEs during spermatogenesis. We are now investigating the mechanisms underlying this hierarchy, by investigating transcriptional patterns and nuclear positioning of the different TE families.
In 2), we found that SPIN1 is involved in the silencing of TEs during spermatogenesis and the protection of male fertility, using a combination of approaches in developmental biology, and transcriptomic and epigenomic profiling. Unexpectedly, Spin1-mutant males show spermatogenic defects and molecular features that distinguish them from classically known mutants of TE repression, highlighting a unique position with the TE repression network that operates during spermatogenesis. Final phenotypic and molecular characterization are underway to epistatically position SPIN1 within this network.
In 3), we found that reactivated TEs may not impair meiosis by mobilizing but rather by altering the meiotic landscape and/or initiating ectopic transcription. We are now concluding the precise mapping of all meiotic recombination steps (chromatin definition of meiotic hotspots, double-strand break formation, and repair) and characterizing the nature and coding potential of the aberrant TE-iniated transcripts that are produced in meiotic cells that reactivate TEs.