Pathogenesis, developmental consequences, and clinical correlations of human embryo fragmentation

Pathogenesis, developmental consequences, and clinical correlations of human embryo fragmentation

REVIEW Pathogenesis, developmental consequences, and clinical correlations of human embryo fragmentation Victor Y. Fujimoto, M.D.,a Richard W. Browne,...

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REVIEW Pathogenesis, developmental consequences, and clinical correlations of human embryo fragmentation Victor Y. Fujimoto, M.D.,a Richard W. Browne, Ph.D.,b Michael S. Bloom, Ph.D.,c Denny Sakkas, Ph.D.,d and Mina Alikani, Ph.D.e a

Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California; b Department of Biotechnical and Clinical Laboratory Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, New York; c Departments of Environmental Health Sciences and Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University at Albany, State University of New York, Rensselaer, New York; d Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut; and e Tyho-Galileo Research Laboratories, West Orange, New Jersey

This narrative review summarizes the current state of knowledge about human embryo fragmentation during IVF. The clinical relevance of fragmentation is discussed and evidence supporting a central role for the oocyte in the pathogenesis of fragmentation is presented. A mechanism of fragmentation as aberrant cell division involving the cytoskeleton is described along with the novel concept of membrane instability in relation to follicular high-density lipoprotein metabolism and cholesterol transport. (Fertil Steril 2011;95:1197–204. 2011 by American Society for Reproductive Medicine.) Key Words: Embryo fragmentation, oocyte quality, cytoskeleton, apoptosis, HDL metabolism, follicular fluid cholesterol

Fragmentation, or the generation of anucleate cell fragments during early embryo development and after IVF, has been shown to be an important biomarker for implantation potential (1–4). Various embryo grading systems have thus been developed, based on (mostly) subjective assessment of this feature along with cell number, size, nucleation, and symmetry (3, 5, 6), but emphasis has been placed primarily on cell number/cleavage rate and fragmentation. A majority of human IVF embryos display some degree of fragmentation (7, 8). Controlled experiments in enucleated mouse oocytes have definitively shown that oocyte activation is a prerequisite to fragmentation and that fragmentation occurs during the cytokinetic phase of the cell cycle (9). Although these experiments have not been repeated in the human, it is reasonable to assume that the process of fragmentation is similar in the human and involves the cytokinetic apparatus (Fig. 1A and B) (9). Time-lapse photography suggests that fragmentation frequently occurs as early as the first mitotic division, although it is not restricted to that division (10, 11). Fragmentation seems to be a dynamic process, and some fragments can be reincorporated into cells (11, 12), indicating that in some instances, fragmentation may be part of normal embryo development. The visible result of fragmentation is usually reduced cell volume and increased disorganization in the embryo (13–16), but Received July 15, 2010; revised November 12, 2010; accepted November 15, 2010; published online December 13, 2010. D.S. is chief scientific officer and holds stock in Molecular Biometrics Inc., V.Y.F. has nothing to disclose. R.W.B. has nothing to disclose. M.S.B. has nothing to disclose. M.A. has nothing to disclose. Reprint requests: Victor Y. Fujimoto, M.D., Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, 2356 Sutter Street, J707, San Francisco, CA 94115-0916 (E-mail: [email protected]).

0015-0282/$36.00 doi:10.1016/j.fertnstert.2010.11.033

fragmentation clearly has other detrimental consequences. Moderate to extensive fragmentation is often associated with blastomere multinucleation and chromosomal abnormalities, most notably mosaicism (17–28), all of which can lead to failure of implantation. Highly fragmented embryos implant less frequently than embryos with minimal or no fragmentation, whereas those with minimal fragmentation seem to be less compromised (29). Fragmentation during the earliest stages of embryonic development is not unique to humans (30) and occurs both in vitro and in vivo in other mammalian species. However, in murine embryos, which are often used as a model for human embryos, fragmentation is infrequent except under particular experimental conditions (9). Instead, these embryos undergo early cleavage arrest when exposed to suboptimal culture conditions (31). Fragmented human embryos show an erratic distribution of the cell adhesion protein E-cadherin (32), and this abnormal distribution may be associated with abnormal microtubule and mitochondrial distribution (33). Because E-cadherin is vitally important to compaction and blastulation, its altered distribution may partly explain the association between extensive fragmentation and reduced blastocyst formation (34–39). Not only does increasing fragmentation result in reduced blastocyst formation in general, fragmentation apparently can influence allocation of cells during differentiation (37). Cell number was reduced and the reduction was either confined to the trophectoderm (in case of minimal fragmentation) or included the inner cell mass as well (in case of fragmentation exceeding 25%). After blastulation, fragments positioned between the trophoblast and the zona pellucida may interfere with the normal hatching process (40). This may provide another explanation for reduced viability of fragmented embryos. Fragmented embryos may have lower mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) levels (41) and a different mitochondrial distribution pattern compared with nonfragmented embryos, with mitochondria

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FIGURE 1 Laser scanning confocal (A, B) and differential interference contrast (C) images of cleavage-stage human embryos showing normal cleavage (A), fragmentation and degeneration (B), and type 4 fragments (C). Three normal mitotic spindles are visible in A, and the cytoskeletal structure in the interphase cells is organized. By contrast, the fragmented embryo in B shows disorganized cytoskeletal structure—one abnormal nucleus and one cell in anaphase. (C) Predominantly large fragments (type 4) are interspersed among blastomeres of varying sizes. Green stain is tubulin, and red stain is DNA. Immunofluorescence staining methods are described by Alikani et al. (7, 9).

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remaining concentrated near the center rather than the periphery of the blastomere (42). This pattern may be linked to reduced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) content and reduced developmental potential (43). Reduced ATP content and lower mitochondrial concentrations within the blastomere may also adversely affect membrane integrity, with subsequent cellular lysis occurring via disruption of plasma membrane ion pump function (11). Apart from the degree of fragmentation, the distribution and size of the fragments are considered to be important (13, 44–46). A number of distinct fragmentation patterns have been described (13, 44), including type 1, few small fragments typically associated with only one blastomere; type 2, many small and localized fragments associated with one or more cells; type 3, small and scattered fragments associated with multiple cells; and type 4, large and scattered fragments associated with several unevenly sized cells. It has been shown that fragmentation type is associated with cell number; certain types, particularly those with localized (type 2) or large scattered fragments (type 4; Fig. 1C), have significantly fewer cells than others (8, 13). One study found higher chromosomal abnormalities in embryos with a scattered rather than localized pattern of fragmentation (23).

EMBRYO FRAGMENTATION AND CLINICAL OUTCOMES Studies that involve assessment of relative degrees of fragmentation are difficult to strictly interpret and even more difficult to compare because of their subjective nature. However, although the exact numeric values assigned to fragmentation are subject to inter- and intraobserver variation, the conclusion that the extent of fragmentation and implantation potential are inversely related has been firmly established across all the studies (3, 13, 45, 47–56). Staessen et al. (57) reported a threshold of 20% fragmentation to demonstrate a difference in implantation rates. Alikani and colleagues assessed homogeneous transfers of fragmented embryos and reported that the highest implantation rates were associated with minimally fragmented embryos with 0–15% fragmentation. Implantation was significantly reduced after transfer of embryos with >15% fragmentation, despite removal of the fragments before transfer (8, 13).

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Furthermore, the pattern of fragmentation was found to influence implantation rate, with larger asymmetrical fragments (type 4; Fig. 1C) leading to the most substantial reduction in implantation (8, 13). Other studies have confirmed the relationship between fragmentation and implantation after adjusting for potential confounding variables, such as maternal age (58, 59). Giorgetti et al. (49) evaluated single day-2 ETs and found fragmentation to negatively influence clinical pregnancy rates. The study by Pelinck et al. (58) established a correlation between the degree of fragmentation, cell number on day 2 or day 3, and implantation rate in unselected single ETs from modified natural cycles. The clinical outcome assessed by Pelinck et al. (58) was the presence of a viable intrauterine gestation at 12 weeks. On the basis of these and other clinical studies, it is concluded that cleavage-stage embryos with <10% fragmentation have the highest implantation potential and result in higher clinical pregnancy rates (58, 60–62). Moreover, collectively, these studies demonstrate that significant and sustained fragmentation during early embryo development reduces the viability of IVF embryos and that this reduction can be primarily explained by association of fragmentation with other cytoplasmic and nuclear abnormalities that lead to developmental arrest—most often before blastulation. It is currently unclear whether fragmented embryos increase the risk of clinical miscarriages (49, 54, 56, 57, 59). However, some investigators have suggested that this may indeed be the case (8, 56, 63). An analysis of 43 cases (over the course of more than a decade in one clinic) in which only embryos with >35% fragmentation were transferred after fragment removal showed that biochemical pregnancies and early miscarriages were the most common outcomes (10 of 13 clinical pregnancies, or 77%), although three apparently healthy live births also resulted. By contrast, a large majority of transfers in which the embryos had minimal fragmentation (n ¼ 1,874) led to live birth (73%) (63). In consideration of the risk of physical and psychological trauma associated with unsuccessful pregnancies, the authors suggested that ‘‘patients for whom only embryos with extensive fragmentation are available should be counseled and warned of the high likelihood

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of a negative outcome following transfer.’’ One study suggested that increased fragmentation was also associated with a higher risk of congenital malformations (47); however, it is premature to conclude any association between embryo fragmentation and birth defect risk without further study.

ROLE OF THE OOCYTE IN EMBRYO FRAGMENTATION Several thorough reviews of sperm quality and embryo development have been previously published (64, 65); here we will focus on the role of the oocyte in embryo fragmentation. That oocyte quality is a key determinant of embryo quality is indisputable. Some studies suggest a correlation between oocyte morphology and embryo fragmentation (66–68), but more accurately stated, embryo development is correlated with oocyte cytoplasmic and nuclear competence. One measure of cytoplasmic competence may be mtDNA content (43, 69–72). It has been postulated that normal mitochondrial function and the absence of mitochondrial mutations are associated with better oocyte developmental potential (73, 74). Unfertilized oocytes and fragmented embryos may have reduced mtDNA levels (41, 70); interestingly, increasing maternal age also leads to reduced mtDNA level (42, 75). Given the role of mitochondria in the generation of ATP through electron transport, mitochondrial and ATP content of oocytes seem to be important determinants of development potential (43, 76). Both cytoplasmic and nuclear competence may be influenced by exogenous gonadotropin administration, but it is not clear whether particular protocols lead to higher or lower fragmentation rates. Ziebe et al. (77) reported that 61% of embryos generated after ovarian hyperstimulation with gonadotropins had <10% fragmentation on day 2 of development, compared with 69% of embryos from nonstimulated natural cycles; this difference was not statistically significant. In the MERIT (Menotrophin vs. Recombinant FSH In vitro fertilization Trial) study, an hMG protocol resulted in 83% of embryos with <20% fragmentation, which was significantly greater than the proportion after FSH stimulation (77%) (78). A previous study did not demonstrate substantive differences in embryo quality between hMG and recombinant FSH stimulation (79). Furthermore, Ng et al. (80) did not see differences in embryo quality between high and low responders to gonadotropin stimulation. A number of studies have focused on follicular environment as a potential determinant of oocyte competence and embryo quality. In particular, apoptotic granulosa cells have been suggested to influence embryo fragmentation (81, 82). Follicles with increased apoptotic bodies in both mural and cumulus granulosa cells were associated with reduced embryo quality (82). Furthermore, caspase activity in granulosa cells correlated positively with mean fragmentation rate in cohorts of IVF embryos (81). Apoptotic markers in cumulus and mural granulosa cells seem to be different after GnRH analog and gonadotropin stimulation compared with gonadotropin only or natural cycles (83). Kaneko et al. (83) found increased proportions of apoptotic cells with the GnRH analog approach, suggesting that GnRH analog treatment may adversely influence oocyte quality (83). Although these studies are intriguing, the exact relationship between follicular apoptosis and oocyte quality remains to be better defined. Furthermore, we conclude that there is not enough evidence to clearly link various gonadotropin stimulation regimens with embryo fragmentation outcomes.

PATHOGENESIS OF EMBRYO FRAGMENTATION A number of hypotheses have been proposed to explain the origin of fragmentation in oocytes and embryos with major emphasis having Fertility and Sterility

been placed on programmed cell death or apoptosis (84). Apoptotic gene expression, including Bcl-2, Bclx, Bax, Fas, and various caspases, has been documented in human embryos (85–91), and proapoptotic genes Harakiri and Caspase-3 have been shown to be overexpressed in some human embryos with substantial fragmentation (86). Increased annexin V staining, an early marker of apoptosis, and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase mediated X-deoxyuridine triphosphate nick end labeling (TUNEL) staining have been shown in fragmented embryos (21, 84) but not consistently (44). Apoptotic changes have also been observed in the human blastocyst (92). Nonetheless, none of these findings conclusively show that fragmentation represents apoptosis, though they perhaps demonstrate that apoptosis can occur in human embryos. An alternative and more plausible hypothesis is that apoptosis occurs selectively as a consequence of fragmentation (44). Another hypothesis on the origin of fragmentation concerns telomere length. Telomeres are regions of repetitive DNA at the end of chromosomes that function in protecting chromosomes from damage. Keefe and colleagues (93, 94) correlated telomere length in germinal vesicle-stage (GV) human oocytes with mean fragmentation in sibling transferred embryos (93). Maximum telomere lengths in spare GV oocytes predicted 20% of variation in embryo fragmentation after controlling for age and basal FSH level (93). However, the relevance of telomere length differences in GVoocytes to sibling oocyte development is vague, and the telomere length hypothesis remains largely unsubstantiated. Increasing maternal age has been debated as a potential cause of increased fragmentation, with no definitive conclusion having been drawn. In a clinical study using a large embryology database, Alikani et al. (13) suggested an inverse relationship between maternal age and embryo fragmentation, whereas other studies have shown no association (49, 95) or an increase in embryo fragmentation with advancing maternal age (39, 96, 97). Two independent experimental studies in the mouse have pointed to abnormalities in the cytoskeleton and microtubule organization as key features in fragmentation. Alikani (32) and Liu and Keefe (98) used a mouse model to show that meiotic exit and oocyte activation were prerequisites to fragmentation after enucleation (32, 98) or treatment of oocytes with anticancer drugs (98). Furthermore, Alikani et al. (32) were able to induce fragmentation in oocytes during the cytokinetic phase of mitosis I and meiosis II. This led to the conclusion that fragmentation is aberrant division due to cytoskeletal disorder rather than a manifestation of apoptosis, as previously suggested. Liu and Keefe (98), on the other hand, concluded that fragmentation was an apoptotic process resulting from DNA damage and proposed a model of fragmentation according to which the failure of chromosomes and/or centromeres to capture microtubules and form a functional spindle would lead to multiple furrow formation and fragmentation. Although the two studies differ in their conclusions with respect to the cause of fragmentation, they agree that fragmentation primarily involves the cytoskeleton and that the process is inhibited if either actin filaments or microtubules are made to depolymerize. It can be further concluded that fragmentation does not occur if a cell is forced into mitotic arrest. There is controversy surrounding the role of reactive oxygen species in the developmental potential of the human oocyte. Embryos with increased fragmentation exhibit greater oxidative stress (OS) in culture (99, 100). However, recent analyses of follicular fluid (FF) enzymatic activities involved in the glutathione synthesis pathway, an important mechanism counteracting OS, suggest no associations between OS biomarkers and embryo fragmentation (101). Another OS enzyme, paraoxonase (PON) 1,

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identified in FF high-density lipoprotein (HDL) particles, has been shown to correlate with cell number but not fragmentation (102). Although reactive oxygen species detected in culture media positively correlate with fragmentation (99, 100), it is not clear to what extent follicular determinants or in vitro culture influence development. Browne et al. (102) reported a negative correlation between HDL cholesterol, apolipoprotein AI (ApoAI) levels and embryo fragmentation (Fig. 2). Other HDL particle-related enzyme activities, including PON activity, as well as triglyceride and phospholipid levels, were also investigated but not found to be associated with embryo fragmentation. An expanded dataset was subsequently published confirming the inverse relationship between FF HDL cholesterol and embryo fragmentation along with the HDL-associated micronutrients a-tocopherol and b-crytoxanthin (103). These multiple HDL component associations with embryo fragmentation strongly suggest a role for FF HDL particles. After adjusting for HDL cholesterol, no other HDL particle component measurements were predictors of embryo fragmentation, leading to the hypothesis that intrafollicular cholesterol metabolism may be primarily responsible for these observations (104). Follicular fluid sphingosine1-phosphate, another major lipid component of HDL particles, has been shown to induce angiogenesis, offering an indirect explanation

for improved follicular vascularity associated with HDL particles (105). A recent study suggests this membrane lipid may influence in vitro cleavage patterns (106). Although the role of cholesterol metabolism in steroidogenesis has been known (107–111), these data provided the first evidence that intrafollicular cholesterol metabolism may influence oocyte competence. Furthermore, proportional composition of cholesterol and phospholipids within FF HDL particles seems to be important in identifying an oocyte with intact lipid membrane properties (112) (Table 1). It is hypothesized that the maturation of the oocyte membrane may be tightly regulated during follicular maturation (104). The proportional composition of phospholipids and cholesterol in FF HDL particles serves as a potential surrogate marker for cholesterol transport between cumulus granulosa cells and the oocyte. This transport probably occurs concurrent with the LH surge, influencing membrane integrity (112). Although phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin are the principal lipids within the cell membrane (113), cholesterol plays a key role in the viability and proliferation of cells (114). Cholesterol trafficking and compartmentalization within the cellular membrane is complex and tightly regulated through de novo synthesis and extracellular cholesterol transport (114). Membrane lipid rafts are essential for cholesterol homeostasis (115) and important for normal oocyte development (116–118). The importance of lipid rafts during early

FIGURE 2 Embryo fragmentation score as a function of unadjusted FF concentrations of HDL particle components, cholesterol, and ApoAI. Reprinted with permission from Fujimoto et al. (104).

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TABLE 1 Proportional HDL particle lipid composition and embryo fragmentation as assessed by Spearman correlations with embryo fragmentation score (rEFS). Parameter

n

Mean

SD

Minimum

Median

Maximum

rEFS

P value

Embryo fragmentation score ApoAI (%) Phospholipids (PL) (%) Total cholesterol (TC) (%) Unesterified cholesterol (UC) (%) Cholesterol esters (%) UC/TC ratio Triglycerides (%) PL/TC ratio

39 39 39 39 31 31 31 38 39

2.05 40.98 30.77 25.24 7.76 18.28 0.29 3.09 1.35

1.00 5.71 3.16 7.01 5.29 6.23 0.18 2.62 0.55

1.00 31.05 24.35 8.42 0.70 6.94 0.03 0.00 0.67

2.00 42.25 30.63 24.23 7.35 17.76 0.29 2.73 1.26

5.00 51.78 37.71 39.33 16.52 33.93 0.60 13.32 3.70

n/a 0.12 0.29 0.35 0.07 0.22 0.03 0.16 0.38

n/a .484 .075 .027a .692 .225 .868 .323 .016a

Note: Modified from Zamah et al. (112), with permission from Elsevier. Study data in this table were obtained with prior approval from the University of California, San Francisco Committee on Human Research. a Significant correlation. Fujimoto. Origins of human embryo fragmentation. Fertil Steril 2011.

embryo cleavage is suggested by the accumulation of cholesterol-rich domains directly adjacent to the cleavage furrow coincident with the appearance of the actin-based contractile ring before cytokinesis (119, 120). It seems that fragmentation occurs primarily near the cleavage furrow in embryos, but it may occur more diffusely away from the main furrow. Several studies have confirmed the incorporation of new membrane during cytokinesis, requiring transport and incorporation of cholesterol and other lipids from organelles (121–123).

Given the role of cholesterol in blastomere membrane biology, the movement of cholesterol and phospholipids within the blastomere membrane is critically important for normal cytokinetic activity (117, 118, 120, 124), with cholesterol depletion resulting in cytokinetic arrest (125). Hence, it is plausible that fragmentation appears with aberrant cholesterol homeostasis in the cholesterol microdomains of the blastomere membrane (126). A physiologic phospholipid/cholesterol ratio in cell membranes is necessary to maintain proper function and membrane fluidity (115). It is an

FIGURE 3 Current understanding of human embryo fragmentation during IVF and the negative clinical consequences associated with this anomaly.

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intriguing observation that this ratio observed in FF HDL particles is correlated with embryo fragmentation (Table 1). Mammalian oocytes do not generate intracellular cholesterol de novo, lacking the necessary biosynthetic enzymes to convert acetate into cholesterol (127). Thus, oocyte membrane maturation occurs through a coordinated process involving the delivery of cholesterol to the membrane from surrounding cumulus cells (127). This lack of intrinsic cholesterol biosynthesis places the burden of oocyte cholesterol incorporation on cholesterol transport between the oocyte and its surrounding cumulus granulosa cells. The upregulation of cholesterol biosynthesis gene expression, including 14 a-demethylase, D14-reductase, and D7-reductase activities, in cumulus cells occurring with the LH surge seems to be important for oocyte meiotic maturation and germinal vesicle breakdown (128, 129). The downstream production of cholesterol may be important to oocyte membrane maturation and stabilization. The efficiency of cholesterol efflux into HDL particles may play an important role in oocyte membrane development, most likely via ABCA1 transporter proteins (104). Cholesterol toxicity in membranes due to poorly regulated intracellular cholesterol metabolism is well documented (130). This could also potentially explain the observed correlations between FF HDL cholesterol levels, FF HDL phospholipid/cholesterol ratios, and embryo fragmentation.

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS This review provides some insights into the problem of embryo fragmentation during therapeutic IVF. It is clear that the presence of significant numbers of fragments, particularly in conjunction with discrepancies in blastomere symmetry, substantially reduces embryo viability and negatively impacts clinical outcome. We believe that the origins of fragmentation may be traced primarily to the oocyte. Figure 3 summarizes our current understanding of embryo fragmentation and its developmental and clinical correlations. Experimental evidence suggests that fragmentation occurs in lieu of normal cytokinesis and coincides with cytoskeletal disorder. Similar to cytokinesis, fragmentation only occurs in meiotically or mitotically active cells and can be inhibited by microtubule and/or microfilament depolymerization. Recent clinical evidence further suggests that fragmentation may result from disruptions in oocyte membrane integrity, which itself may result from aberrant lipid metabolism within the Graafian follicle. It remains to be determined whether these membrane abnormalities lead to specific types of fragmentation or the effect is more general. A better understanding of the interplay between oocyte membrane lipid composition and cytoskeletal dynamics and organization during cytokinesis may lead to novel approaches to the prevention of fragmentation.

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Vol. 95, No. 4, March 15, 2011