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Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Importance of bicarbonate/CO2 for fertilization of pig oocytes in vitro, and synergism with caffeine

K Suzuki, M Ebihara, T Nagai, NG Clarke and RA Harrison

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 6(2) 221 - 227
Published: 1994

Abstract

Fertilization of pig oocytes was performed in vitro in modified Tyrode's media in which either HEPES or bicarbonate/CO2, or both, were included as buffer systems; caffeine (2 mM) was also included in some of the media because it is a reported stimulant of fertilization. The composition of the bicarbonate-containing media was designed so as to maintain the same pH and osmolality as bicarbonate-free media. The inclusion of bicarbonate during gamete co-incubation in caffeine-containing medium led to high levels of fertilization (66% of 238 mature oocytes were fertilized). However, essentially no fertilization occurred if bicarbonate was replaced with HEPES (0.7% of 146 oocytes were fertilized; significantly different, P < 0.001). Inclusion of HEPES in bicarbonate-containing medium during gamete co-incubation did not affect fertilization, showing that HEPES did not exert an inhibitory effect. Omission of bicarbonate during sperm preincubation also did not affect fertilization. If caffeine was included in bicarbonate-containing medium, 73% of 311 oocytes were fertilized whereas if caffeine was omitted only 14% of 326 oocytes were fertilized (significantly different, P < 0.001). In the absence of bicarbonate, when fertilization was very low, caffeine had no stimulatory effect. The results indicate that bicarbonate is essential for pig fertilization in vitro, but that caffeine exerts a synergistic stimulatory effect.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RD9940221

© CSIRO 1994

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