Development of Sheep Embryos in vitro in a Medium Supplemented with Different Batches of Serum Albumin
PA Batt and BG Miller
Australian Journal of Biological Sciences
41(3) 371 - 376
Published: 1988
Abstract
Variability in different lots of commercial serum albumin affects mammalian embryo development in culture. The composition of commercial preparations of ovine, bovine and defatted bovine serum albumin and a fraction of ovine serum containing proteins with a mean molecular weight of 65 kDa (fraction 3) was examined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. All preparations were heavily contaminated with serum proteins other than albumin. Day-6 sheep morulae were cultured for 48 h in a basal bicarbonate-buffered salt solution supplemented with the commercial preparations of ovine, bovine or defatted bovine serum albumin. These three albumin preparations differed in their abilities to support the development of morulae into expanded blastocysts, but these differences disappeared when the basal medium was also supplemented with a component of ovine serum containing substances with molecular weights of less than 10 kDa. In the latter case, the three commercial albumin preparations and fraction 3 of ovine serum all supported full development in about 40-60% of morulae.https://doi.org/10.1071/BI9880371
© CSIRO 1988