113 CHARACTERIZATION OF THE BOVINE EMBRYO-DERIVED CT-1 CELL LINE FOR STUDYING REGULATION OF TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS EXPRESSED WITHIN THE BOVINE TROPHECTODERM
A. T. Schiffmacher and C. L. Keefer
Reproduction, Fertility and Development
20(1) 136 - 137
Published: 12 December 2007
Abstract
Cloned bovine embryos have been shown to display deviations in gene expression of trophectodermal (TE) lineage-specific transcription factors, including Cdx2, Errβ, Eomes, Mash2, and Hand1. Misregulation of these genes in the early TE has been implicated to play a causal role in abnormal placental formation and fetal loss. Because suboptimal in vitro culture conditions fail to support development beyond hatching, very little is known about regulation of peri-attachment bovine embryo development. Trophectodermal-derived bovine cell lines, such as the CT-1 cell line produced by Talbot and colleagues (Talbot et al. 2000 Biol. Reprod. 62, 235–247) could prove beneficial for understanding how regulatory factors govern early bovine TE development. The CT-1 cell line has been cultured continuously for over 2 years and appears morphologically similar to primary bovine TE outgrowths. Furthermore, these cells produce interferon τ, a cytokine unique to the early bovine TE. The objective of this study was to develop a gene expression profile of selected developmental genes that play a potential role in commitment to the TE fate, maintenance of multipotency, or differentiation into a binucleate phenotype. The CT-1 colonies were initially expanded on gamma-irradiated STO cells at 37°C and 5% CO2 and passaged weekly. Cells were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 1 mhttps://doi.org/10.1071/RDv20n1Ab113
© CSIRO 2007