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RESEARCH ARTICLE

55 INFLUENCE OF DONOR CELL TYPE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF PORCINE NUCLEAR TRANSFER EMBRYOS

K. Lee, W. L. Fodor and Z. Machaty

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 18(2) 136 - 136
Published: 14 December 2005

Abstract

Embryonic development after nuclear transfer is very low; the majority of cloned embryos do not survive the pre-implantation stage. Recent reports indicate that the characteristics of nuclear transfer embryos depend on the type of nuclear donor cells. It has been suggested that development after nuclear transfer improves if less differentiated cells are used as nuclear donors. The aim of the present study was to investigate the developmental potential of nuclear transfer embryos reconstructed using differentiated and non-differentiated cells. Two types of non-differentiated cells, skin stem cells and olfactory bulb progenitor cells, were used; fetal fibroblasts were used as differentiated control. Prior to nuclear transfer, the differentiated state of the cells was characterized by Oct-4 immunocytochemistry (Chemicon International, Inc., Temecula, CA, USA); Oct-4 is known to be expressed by pluripotent cells only. During nuclear transfer, the cells were transferred into the perivitelline space of in vitro-matured enucleated oocytes. After fusion, reconstructed oocytes were activated by an electrical pulse followed by incubation in 10 µg/mL cycloheximide and 5 µg/mL cytochalasin B for 5 h. The embryos were subsequently cultured in NCSU-23 medium for 6 days; their developmental data were recorded and compared by ANOVA. Non-differentiated cell types showed strong Oct-4 expression, whereas the marker protein was completely absent in fetal fibroblast cells. A total of 161 embryos were reconstructed using skin stem cells, 171 embryos from olfactory bulb progenitor cells, and 189 embryos from fibroblasts. Of the skin stem cell-derived embryos, 32.9% cleaved, and during subsequent culture, 5.6% developed to the morula/blastocyst stage. In the olfactory bulb progenitor cell group, 19.8% cleaved, and the percentage of embryos that developed to the morula/blastocyst stage was 4.7%. In the control group, 22.7% cleaved; the morula/blastocyst formation was 2.6%. Embryos reconstructed from skin stem cells showed superior cleavage rate compared to embryos from the other cell types (P < 0.05). Also, morula/blastocyst formation from skin stem cells was significantly higher than that from fetal fibroblasts (P < 0.05), and morula/blastocyst formation from olfactory bulb progenitor cell-derived embryos also tended to be higher compared to control embryos (P = 0.08). Furthermore, the formation of morulae/blastocysts per cleaved embryos was the highest in embryos reconstructed with olfactory bulb progenitor cells (23.5% vs. 17.0% using skin stem cells and 11.6% using fibroblasts) implying that embryos from olfactory bulb progenitor cells may have higher developmental potential in later stages of development. The results demonstrate that nuclei of different donor cells support development to various degrees and confirm previous reports that using non-differentiated cells as nuclear donors increases the efficiency of nuclear transfer in the pig.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv18n2Ab55

© CSIRO 2005

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