Published May 19, 2026 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Fertilization triggers early proteomic symmetry breaking in mammalian embryos

  • 1. ROR icon University of Central Florida
  • 2. Parallel Squared Technology Institute
  • 3. ROR icon Northeastern University
  • 4. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Description

While non-mammalian embryos often rely on spatial pre-patterning, mammalian development has long been thought to begin with equivalent blastomeres. However, emerging evidence challenges this. Here, using multiplexed and label-free single-cell proteomics, we identify over 300 asymmetrically abundant proteins—many involved in protein degradation and transport—dividing mouse 2-cell-stage blastomeres into two distinct clusters, which we term alpha and beta. These proteomic asymmetries are detectable as early as the zygote stage, intensify by the 4-cell stage, and correlate with the sperm entry site, implicating fertilization as a symmetry-breaking event. Splitting 2-cell-stage embryos into halves reveals that beta blastomeres possess greater developmental potential than alpha blastomeres. Similar clustering and protein enrichment patterns found in human 2-cell embryos suggest this early asymmetry might be conserved. These findings uncover a previously unrecognized proteomic pre-patterning triggered by fertilization in mammalian embryos, with important implications for understanding totipotency and early lineage bias.

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