Experiments from the study show that when paternal mitochondria persist for longer than they should during development, the embryo is at greater risk of lethality.
Harboured inside the cells of nearly all multicellular animals, plants and fungi are mitochondria, organelles that play an important role in generating the energy that cells need to survive.
Shortly after a sperm penetrates an egg during fertilisation, the sperm's mitochondria are degraded while the egg's mitochondria persist, researchers said.
The paternal mitochondria were found to partially self-destruct before the mitochondria were surrounded by autophagosomes, which target components within a cell and facilitate their degradation.
This suggests that another mechanism, something within the paternal mitochondrion itself, initiates the degradation process.
RNA analysis of paternal mitochondria during early stages of embryonic development hinted that it is the cps-6 gene that facilitates this process, which the team confirmed by studying sperm lacking cps-6; without it, paternal mitochondria remained significantly later into the development stage.
When the researchers engineered paternal mitochondria to breakdown during later stages of development, this increased the chances that the embryo would not survive, suggesting that the transmission of paternal mitochondria is an evolutionary disadvantage.
Results from the study suggest that cps-6 plays a key role in initiating the self-destruction of paternal sperm, which likely benefits the embryo.
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