276 FIBROBLAST GROWTH FACTOR 2 PROMOTES BOVINE OOCYTE MEIOTIC MATURATION AND DEVELOPMENTAL COMPETENCE
K. Zhang A , P. J. Hansen A and A. D. Ealy ADepartment of Animal Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA
Reproduction, Fertility and Development 23(1) 236-236 https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv23n1Ab276
Published: 7 December 2010
Abstract
Oocyte competency is acquired during the course of folliculogenesis and is controlled by various endocrine and paracrine signals. One of these is fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2). Its expression is up-regulated in theca and granulosa cells during final maturation of a bovine follicle, and its cognate receptors are expressed in cumulus cells and oocytes throughout the final stages of oocyte maturation. The overall goal of this work was to describe how supplementing FGF2 during oocyte maturation in vitro affects oocyte maturation and subsequent embryo development. Cumulus–oocyte complexes (COC) were collected from bovine ovaries obtained from a local abattoir and cultured in defined TCM-based oocyte maturation medium. Depending on the study, oocytes were examined either during (6 h) or after (21 h) maturation or were fertilized in vitro and examined throughout in vitro embryo development in modified SOFF. Data were analysed with least-squares ANOVA using GLM of SAS. Adding 0.5 to 50 ng mL–1 of FGF2 did not affect cleavage rate or the percentage of 8 to 16 cell embryos at day 3 post-IVF. However, the blastocyst rate at day 7 was greater when oocytes were exposed to 0.5 ng mL–1 of FGF2 during maturation [30.0 ± 1.9% (17/109) v. 16.0 ± 2.6% (23/77) for nontreatment control; 4 replicates; P < 0.05], whereas higher doses of FGF2 did not affect blastocyst rates when compared with controls. Total cell number per blastocyst was not affected by FGF2 addition. The effects of FGF2 on oocyte maturation and cumulus expansion were examined to better understand how FGF2 improves oocyte competency. Adding 0.5 ng mL–1 of FGF2 did not affect the percentage of oocytes containing condensed chromatin after 6 h IVM or metaphase II (MII) rate after 21 h IVM, but 0.5 ng mL–1 of FGF2 treatment increased the cumulus expansion index score after 21 h IVM (P < 0.05). Interestingly, adding 5 ng mL–1 but not 50 ng mL–1 of FGF2 increased MII rate [61.5 ± 4.3% (53/120) for 5 ng mL–1 of FGF2 v. 46.9 ± 5.9% (64/104) for nontreatment controls; 7 replicates; P < 0.05], but neither FGF2 affected rates of chromatin condensation and cumulus expansion. Changes in the relative abundance for several putative oocyte competency markers and maternal genes (CTSB, Sprouty2, EGFR, FSHR, Has2, BMP15, GDF9, JY-1, Follistatin, H2A) were examined at 6 and 21 h after treatment with 0.5 ng mL–1 of FGF2 by quantitative RT-PCR. Relative amounts of 18S RNA was used as an internal control, and 2-ΔΔCT was used to quantify relative gene expression. The relative abundance of most of the transcripts examined was not affected by FGF2, but EGFR mRNA levels were greater after 6 h but not 21 h IVM in cumulus cells isolated from FGF2-supplemented COC (P = 0.057). In summary, improvements in blastocyst development were achieved by FGF2 treatment during oocyte maturation. The reason for the enhanced oocyte competency remains unclear, but it may occur in part because of improvements in cumulus expansion and production of EGFR.
This project was supported by NRICGP number 2008-35203-19106 from the USDA-NIFA.