Register      Login
Reproduction, Fertility and Development Reproduction, Fertility and Development Society
Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

34 DEVELOPMENTAL ABILITY OF ZONA-FREE PORCINE CLONED EMBRYOS RECONSTRUCTED BY SOMATIC CELLS AND CENTRIFUGED CYTOPLASTS

M. Fahrudin, K. Kikuchi, N. W. K. Karja, M. Ozawa, T. Somfai, J. Noguchi, H. Kaneko and T. Nagai

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 18(2) 125 - 126
Published: 14 December 2005

Abstract

The combination of bulk enucleation and zona-free cloning will offer simplification of the conventional nuclear transfer technique. A bulk enucleation method such as enucleation by centrifugation could reduce the time of manipulation that is necessary for removing genetic materials from the oocytes. The present study was conducted to examine the ability of cytoplasts obtained by centrifugation of zona-free in vitro maturation (IVM) porcine oocytes to support remodeling of the somatic cell nucleus and the subsequent development in vitro of somatic cell nuclear transferred (SCNT) embryos. A primary culture of cumulus cells was used as the source of donor cells, and recipient cytoplasts were derived from IVM oocytes that were cultured for 48 h, denuded of zonae pellucidae, and subjected to gradient centrifugation in Percoll solution to separate the ooplasm into fragments. Fragments were stained with Hoechst-33342 and cytoplasts were selected under an epifluorescence microscope. Then two or three cytoplasts were aggregated with a single somatic cell in phytohemagglutinin solution (500 µg/mL). Fusion between somatic cell and cytoplasts was induced by two DC pulses of 1.5 kV/cm for 20 µs, and activation was accomplished by two DC pulses of 0.8 kV/cm for 30 µs at 1 h after fusion in 0.28 M mannitol solution supplemented with 0.05 mM CaCl2 and 0.1 mM MgSO4. The resultant embryos were transferred to a WOW culture system (Vajta et al. 2000 Mol. Reprod. Dev. 55, 256-264) and cultured in glucose-free NCSU-37 containing 4 mg/mL BSA supplemented with 0.17 mM sodium pyruvate and 2.73 mM sodium lactate from Days 0 to 2; from Days 2 to 7 they were cultured in NCSU-37 supplemented with 5.55 mM {D}-glucose and 5% FCS. Some of the reconstructed embryos were fixed at 1, 10, and 24 h after activation and stained with 1% (w/v) orcein to display the morphology of the transferred somatic nuclei. The results showed that 53.6% (30/56) of the SCNT embryos underwent premature chromosome condensation at 1 h, 90.9% (50/55) formed pseudo-pronuclei at 10 h, and 21% (19/90) of them cleaved to the two-cell stage at 24 h after the activation. The development to the blastocyst stage of the embryos that were reconstructed by quartet cells (three cytoplasts and one somatic cell; 8.9%, 10/112) was significantly higher (P < 0.05) than that of the triplet ones (2.2%, 3/139). However, these blastocyst rates were significantly lower (P < 0.05) than the blastocyst development rate of parthenogenetic embryos with the intact zonae pellucidae (28.3%, 17/60). These results suggest that (1) cytoplasts obtained by gradient centrifugation could support reprogramming of somatic cells and in vitro development of SCNT embryos to the blastocyst stage, and (2) the volume of cytoplasts apparently affects their in vitro development in pigs.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv18n2Ab34

© CSIRO 2005

Committee on Publication Ethics

Export Citation Get Permission

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn Share via Email