157 EFFECT OF MELATONIN ON EMBRYO QUALITY OF BOVINE OOCYTES SUBJECTED TO HEAT SHOCK

2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 208
Author(s):  
N. G. Alves ◽  
I. J. Ascari ◽  
L. S. A. Camargo ◽  
J. Jasmin ◽  
C. C. R. Quintão ◽  
...  

The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of different concentrations of melatonin added to in vitro maturation (IVM) medium of oocytes subjected to heat shock on embryo quality. Immature oocytes aspirated from ovaries obtained from a slaughterhouse were selected and randomly allocated in factorial experiment design (3 × 2). Three concentrations of melatonin (0, 10–6, and 10–4 M; M5250, Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) were added to the IVM medium and 2 incubation conditions (conventional: 24 h at 38.5°C and 5% CO2; heat shock: 12 h at 41°C followed by 12 h at 38.5°C and 5% CO2) were tested, resulting in treatments: M1 (0 M; 38.5°C; n = 15), M2 (10–6 M; 38.5°C; n = 15), M3 (10–4 M; 38.5°C; n = 15), M4 (0 M; 41°C; n = 15), M5 (10–6 M; 41°C; n = 15), and M6 (10–4 M; 41°C; n = 15). The IVM was performed in a Nunc plate (144444 – Thermo, Fisher Scientific Inc., Pittsburgh, PA, USA) containing 400 µL of TCM-199 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) supplemented with 20 µg mL–1 of FSH (Pluset®, Calier Laboratories, Barcelona, Spain) and 10% oestrus cow serum. Oocytes were IVF in FERT-TALP medium for 20–22 h and incubated at 38.5°C and 5% CO2. After IVF, the presumptive zygotes were denuded and cultured in CR2aa medium supplemented with 2.5% FCS (Nutricell, Campinas, Brazil) in an incubator at 38.5°C under 5% CO2, 5% O2, and 90% N2, and saturated humidity for 8 days. Blastocysts with 8 days post-fertilization from different treatments were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 1 h and analysed by TUNEL assay (Deadend™ Fluorometric TUNEL System, Promega, Madison, WI, USA) to evaluate embryonic quality. Data were analysed by generalised linear models considering the Poisson distribution and using the Proc Genmod of SAS software (version 9.1; SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) considering effects of melatonin concentration, incubation conditions, and interaction between the factors. Values shown are the mean ± s.e.m. The interaction between melatonin concentration and incubation conditions was no significant (P > 0.05). The total number of cells was not affected (P > 0.05) by melatonin, but it was decreased (P < 0.05) by heat shock (M1 = 117 ± 6.7a; M2 = 118 ± 4.2a; M3 = 120 ± 6.3a; M4 = 102 ± 6.2b; M5 = 106 ± 5.7b; M6 = 108 ± 8.9b). Melatonin and heat shock did not affect (P > 0.05) the index of embryo apoptotic cells (M1 = 15.3% ± 2.0; M2 = 15.5% ± 1.3; M3 = 13.6% ± 2.0; M4 = 14.9% ± 1.5; M5 = 13.3% ± 1.3; M6 = 13.5% ± 1.2) and the index of trophoblast cells (M1 = 74.6% ± 2.3; M2 = 75.0% ± 1.7; M3 = 75.2% ± 1.9; M4 = 78.4% ± 2.3; M5 = 76.4% ± 3.0; M6 = 75.2% ± 2.6). The melatonin and heat shock affected the index of the inner cell mass (ICM; P < 0.05), and the heat shock reduced the index of the ICM of oocytes not treated with melatonin (M1 = 25.4% ± 2.3a; M2 = 25.0% ± 1.7a; M3 = 24.8% ± 1.8a; M4 = 21.6% ± 2.3b; M5 = 23.6% ± 3.0a; M6 = 24.8% ± 2.6a). In conclusion, melatonin supplementation to the medium IVM of oocytes subjected to heat shock had no effect on blastocyst total cell number, general apoptotic index, or index of the trophoblast cells, but increased index of the ICM. Research was supported by Fapemig, CNPq, Embrapa, and CAPES.

1995 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 304 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Rath ◽  
H. Niemann ◽  
T. Tao ◽  
M. Boerjan

Development ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 102 (4) ◽  
pp. 793-803 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.E. Papaioannou ◽  
K.M. Ebert

Total cell number as well as differential cell numbers representing the inner cell mass (ICM) and trophectoderm were determined by a differential staining technique for preimplantation pig embryos recovered between 5 and 8 days after the onset of oestrus. Total cell number increased rapidly over this time span and significant effects were found between embryos of the same chronological age from different females. Inner cells could be detected in some but not all embryos of 12–16 cells. The proportion of inner cells was low in morulae but increased during differentiation of ICM and trophectoderm in early blastocysts. The proportion of ICM cells then decreased as blastocysts expanded and hatched. Some embryos were cultured in vitro and others were transferred to the oviducts of immature mice as a surrogate in vivo environment and assessed for morphology and cell number after several days. Although total cell number did not reach in vivo levels, morphological development and cell number increase was sustained better in the immature mice than in vitro. The proportion of ICM cells in blastocysts formed in vitro was in the normal range.


Development ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 597-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Hardy ◽  
A.H. Handyside ◽  
R.M. Winston

The development of 181 surplus human embryos, including both normally and abnormally fertilized, was observed from day 2 to day 5, 6 or 7 in vitro. 63/149 (42%) normally fertilized embryos reached the blastocyst stage on day 5 or 6. Total, trophectoderm (TE) and inner cell mass (ICM) cell numbers were analyzed by differential labelling of the nuclei with polynucleotide-specific fluorochromes. The TE nuclei were labelled with one fluorochrome during immunosurgical lysis, before fixing the embryo and labelling both sets of nuclei with a second fluorochrome (Handyside and Hunter, 1984, 1986). Newly expanded normally fertilized blastocysts on day 5 had a total of 58.3 +/− 8.1 cells, which increased to 84.4 +/− 5.7 and 125.5 +/− 19 on days 6 and 7, respectively. The numbers of TE cells were similar on days 5 and 6 (37.9 +/− 6.0 and 40.3 +/− 5.0, respectively) and then doubled on day 7 (80.6 +/− 15.2). In contrast, ICM cell numbers doubled between days 5 and 6 (20.4 +/− 4.0 and 41.9 +/− 5.0, respectively) and remained virtually unchanged on day 7 (45.6 +/− 10.2). There was widespread cell death in both the TE and ICM as evidenced by fragmenting nuclei, which increased substantially by day 7. These results are compared with the numbers of cells in morphologically abnormal blastocysts and blastocysts derived from abnormally fertilized embryos. The nuclei of arrested embryos were also examined. The number of TE and ICM cells allocated in normally fertilized blastocysts appears to be similar to the numbers allocated in the mouse. Unlike the mouse, however, the proportion of ICM cells remains higher, despite cell death in both lineages.


Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (5) ◽  
pp. 1333-1339 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Bhatnagar ◽  
V.E. Papaioannou ◽  
J.D. Biggers

The effects of macrophage colony stimulating factor on the development of the zygote to the blastocyst stage of an outbred strain of mouse have been studied in KSOM, an improved medium that supports a high rate of in vitro development. Macrophage colony stimulating factor accelerates the formation of the blastocyst cavity by day 4 (96 hours post-hCG). It also increases overall embryonic cell number through a differential increase in the number of trophoblast cells, with no significant effect on the number of inner cell mass cells. By day 5 of culture (120 hours post-hCG), colony stimulating factor-treated embryos have about 20 more trophoblast cells than control embryos, an increase of about 30 percent of the total number of cells in a control blastocyst. The maximum response of embryos was obtained at a concentration around 540 U ml-1 colony stimulating factor (identical to 918 Stanley units ml-1), and the cytokine can produce the same effects even if it is present in the medium for only part of the culture period. This in vitro stimulation of preimplantation development with macrophage colony stimulating factor is compatible with continued normal fetal development in vivo.


Development ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 979-990
Author(s):  
J. Rossant

Inner cell masses (ICMs) were dissected from 3½- and 4½-day blastocysts and cultured in contact with 2½-day morulae. Blastocysts and morulae were homozygous for different electrophoretic variants of the enzyme glucose phosphate isomerase (GPI). Aggregation of ICMs and morulae was observed, and such aggregates were able to form blastocysts in vitro and morphologically normal foetuses in utero. GPI analysis of these conceptuses revealed that most were chimaeric. However, donor ICM-type isozyme was only detected in the embryonic and extra-embryonic fractions of the chimaeras and never in the trophoblastic fraction. Thus, ICM cells appear unable to form trophoblast derivatives even when exposed to ‘outside’ conditions as experienced by developing trophoblast cells. This is evidence that ICM cells, although not overtly differentiated, are determined by 3½ days.


Development ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 601-615
Author(s):  
M. H. L. Snow

Mouse embryos were grown in vitro from the 2-cell stage to blastocysts in the presence of [3H]thymidine. Methyl-T-thymidine and thymidine-6-T(n) were used and both forms found to be lethal at concentrations above 0·1 μCi/ml. Both forms of [3H]Tdr at concentrations between 0·01 and 0·1 μCi/ml caused a highly significant (P &lt; 0·001) reduction in blastocyst cell number. The reduction in cell number, which was positively correlated with specific activity and tritium concentration, was associated with cell damage typical of radiation damage caused by tritium disintegration. Thymidine-6-T(n) also significantly reduced the number of 2-cell embryos forming blastocysts whereas methyl-T-Tdr did not. This difference in effect is assumed to be caused by contamination of one form of [3H]Tdr with a by-product of the tritiation process. A study of the cleavage stages showed that almost all the reduction in cell numbers could be accounted for by selective cell death occurring at the 16-cell stage. Cells which survive that stage cleave at a normal rate. The cells that are most susceptible to [3H]Tdr damage were found to normally contribute to the inner cell mass. The [3H]Tdr-resistant cells form the trophoblast. It is possible to grow blastocysts in [3H]Tdr such that they contain no inner cell mass but are composed entirely of trophoblast. Comparatively short (12 h) incubation with [3H]Tdr at any stage prior to the 16-cell stage will cause this damage. Possible reasons for this differential effect are discussed, and also compared with damage caused by X-irradiation.


Reproduction ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 133 (1) ◽  
pp. 231-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig Smith ◽  
Debbie Berg ◽  
Sue Beaumont ◽  
Neil T Standley ◽  
David N Wells ◽  
...  

During somatic cell nuclear transfer (NT), the transcriptional status of the donor cell has to be reprogrammed to reflect that of an embryo. We analysed the accuracy of this process by comparing transcript levels of four developmentally important genes (Oct4,Otx2,Ifitm3,GATA6), a gene involved in epigenetic regulation (Dnmt3a) and three housekeeping genes (β-actin, β-tubulinandGAPDH) in 21 NT blastocysts with that in genetically half-identicalin vitroproduced (IVP,n=19) andin vivo(n=15) bovine embryos. We have optimised an RNA-isolation and SYBR-green-based real-time RT-PCR procedure allowing the reproducible absolute quantification of multiple genes from a single blastocyst. Our data indicated that transcript levels did not differ significantly between stage and grade-matched zona-free NT and IVP embryos except for Ifitm3/Fragilis, which was expressed at twofold higher levels in NT blastocysts.Ifitm3expression is confined to the inner cell mass at day 7 blastocysts and to the epiblast in day 14 embryos. No ectopic expression in the trophectoderm was seen in NT embryos. Gene expression in NTand IVP embryos increased between two- and threefold for all eight genes from early to late blastocyst stages. This increase exceeded the increase in cell number over this time period indicating an increase in transcript number per cell. Embryo quality (morphological grading) was correlated to cell number for NT and IVP embryos with grade 3 blastocysts containing 30% fewer cells. However, only NT embryos displayed a significant reduction in gene expression (50%) with loss of quality. Variability in gene expression levels was not significantly different in NT, IVP orin vivoembryos but differed among genes, suggesting that the stringency of regulation is intrinsic to a gene and not affected by culture or nuclear transfer.Oct4levels exhibited the lowest variability. Analysing the total variability of all eight genes for individual embryos revealed thatin vivoembryos resembled each other much more than did NT and IVP blastocysts. Furthermore,in vivoembryos, consisting of 1.5-fold more cells, generally contained two- to fourfold more transcripts for the eight genes than did their cultured counterparts. Thus, culture conditions (in vivoversusin vitro) have greater effects on gene expression than does nuclear transfer when minimising genetic heterogeneity.


2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 137
Author(s):  
Y. Liu ◽  
A. Lucas-Hahn ◽  
B. Petersen ◽  
R. Li ◽  
D. Hermann ◽  
...  

Conventional “Dolly”-based cloned (CNT) embryos maintain zona pellucida and can be transferred early in development. Handmade cloned (HMC) embryos are zona free and are cultured to later stages for transfer. We have shown differences between HMC and CNT embryos (Rep. Fert. Dev. 26, 123), and both in vitro culture and cloning method (NT) are associated with alterations in histone acetylation. More studies are needed to clarify whether CNT and HMC embryos differ in epigenetic profiles due to NT method or culture condition. Here we investigated histone acetylation profile of NT embryos produced by CNT or HMC with or without 5 to 6 days in vitro culture, emphasising quality and gene expression in resulting embryos. Both NT methods were performed on Day 0 (D0) with same oocyte batch, donor cells, and culture medium (CNT in group, HMC in well of well). On D0, 5, and 6 after CNT (Clon. Stem Cells 10, 355) or HMC (Zygote 20, 61), all developed embryos of all morphological qualities were collected for immunostaining of H3K18ac, and on D0 and 6 for mRNA expression of the genes KAT2A/2B, EP300, HDAC1/2, DNMT1o/s, and GAPDH. Embryo quality was evaluated normal (clear inner cell mass, high cell number, no fragments) or bad (no clear inner cell mass, low cell number, fragments). Cell numbers per blastocyst were counted on D5 and 6. Differences in cell number and H3K18ac level between different groups and days were analysed by ANOVA; gene expression data were analysed by GLM (SAS version 9.3, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). Embryo development rates of both NT methods were reported previously (Rep. Fert. Dev. 26, 123). On D5 and 6, all HMC embryos were evaluated as normal, but the CNT group contained both normal and bad embryos. Regarding cell numbers (Table 1), on D5 there was no difference between normal CNT and HMC embryos, but numbers were lower in CNT bad embryos. On D6 the blastocyst cell number was lower in both normal and bad CNT embryos compared with HMC. Regarding H3K18ac levels (Table 1), no differences were found on D5 between normal CNT and HMC embryos, but on D6 both CNT normal and bad embryos had higher H3K18ac level compared with HMC. On D0, no difference was found in mRNA expression of all 8 genes. On D6, KAT2A expression was slight increased (1.8-fold) in CNT compared with HMC embryos (P < 0.05). In conclusion, no differences were found between CNT and HMC embryos after completed NT procedure (D0) or after 5 days in vitro culture. However, differences in quality (cell number and H3K18ac) and gene expression between the 2 NT methods were observed when blastocyst expansion was initiated (D6). Thus, the 2 NT methods seem to produce embryos of similar quality, which is maintained over 5 days in vitro culture, but thereafter gene expression and histone acetylation are more active in CNT embryos. Table 1.Cell number and H3K18ac level1


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 164
Author(s):  
A. E. Ynsaurralde Rivolta ◽  
M. Suvá ◽  
V. Alberio ◽  
C. Vazquez Echegaray ◽  
A. Guberman ◽  
...  

Bovine monozygotic production of twins became popular in the 1980s as a technique to multiply high value genetics. Moreover, it also became a powerful model for research. Different techniques have been used on bovine embryos obtained by superovulation. In this work, we compared the development rates and quality of monozygotic twin embryos produced by blastomere separation (BS) and embryo bisection (EB) of IVF embryos. To this aim, cumulus-oocytes complexes collected from slaughterhouse ovaries were in vitro matured in TCM 199 containing 10% fetal bovine serum, 10µg mL−1 FSH, 0.3mM sodium pyruvate, 100mM cysteamine, and 2% antibiotic-antimycotic for 24h, at 6.5% CO2 in humidified air and 38.5°C. The IVF was performed with 16×106 spermatozoa per mL for 5h. Afterward, presumptive zygotes were cultured in SOF medium for 7 days at 38.5°C and 5% O2. After 24h of culture, blastomeres of 2-cell stage embryos (N=114) were separated and each one was cultured individually in a microwell for 7 days. Embryo bisection (N=179) was performed manually on Day-7 blastocysts previously depleted of their zonae pellucidae, under stereoscopic microscope. Hemi embryos were cultured for 24h and then twins and single blastocyst rates were calculated. For quality assessment, diameter, total and inner cell mass (ICM) cell number of hemi embryos (BS: 6 couples; ES: 10 couples) and the control group (C: 11) were evaluated. The ICM cell number was measured by immunofluorescence staining using SOX2 antibody and the percentage of ICM and trophectoderm (TE) cells was calculated. The results were analysed using Fisher’s exact test and ANOVA with mean comparison using Tukey’s test (P=0.05). No statistical differences were found in blastocyst rates of twins and single hemi embryos produced by BS (28 and 25%) or EB (23 and 32%). Blastocyst diameter was similar between groups and control. Hemi embryos exhibited lower total and ICM cell number than control (BS: 43±18, EB: 57±14v. C: 93±35 and BS: 16±7, EB: 12±8v. C: 34±19). However, BS hemi embryos had higher ICM and lower TE percentage (40/60%) compared with the EB group (20/80%). The control group did not differ with hemi embryo treatments for ICM and TE (30/70%). Our preliminary results have indicated that although the development rates of hemi embryos produced in vitro were similar between both techniques, blastomere separation generates better quality embryos than blastocyst bisection.


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