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

154 THE QUANTITY OF BOVINE VIRAL DIARRHEA VIRUS ASSOCIATED WITH SINGLE ZONA PELLUCIDA-INTACT IN VITRO-PRODUCED BOVINE EMBRYOS FOLLOWING ARTIFICIAL EXPOSURE

J. A. Gard, M. D. Givens, P. K. Galik, K. P. Riddell, M. S. D. Marley, D. A. Stringfellow, M. A. Edmondson and B. K. Whitlock

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 20(1) 157 - 157
Published: 12 December 2007

Abstract

The primary objective of this study was to determine the percentage of individual, preimplantation, in vitro-produced bovine embryos which maintained association with virus despite washing following artificial exposure to a high affinity strain of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV). Another objective of this study was to determine the quantity of virus associated with these embryos. A total of eighty-seven zona pellucida-intact, Day 7, in vitro-produced bovine embryos were exposed for 1 h to 2 × 106 cell culture infected doses per mL to the 50 percent endpoint (CCID50 mL–1) of a type 1 noncytopathic strain of BVDV (SD-1). Following exposure, the embryos were washed according to International Embryo Transfer Society standards for in vitro-produced bovine embryos; they then underwent sonication, RNA extraction, and freezing at –80°C until assayed for virus. A real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR) was run in duplicate on each of the 87 embryos. Forty-two percent (39/87) of the embryos assayed were determined to be positive for virus. The quantity of virus associated with the embryos averaged 0.55 viral copies per 5 µL (SD = 0.89 copies/5 µL, SEM = 0.14 copies/5 µL). Assessment of data using tolerance intervals (P = 0.05) indicates that 90% of contaminated embryos were associated with ≤2.40 viral copies per 5 µL while 99% of contaminated embryos were associated with ≤3.44 viral copies per 5 µL. These findings show that there is a low level of virus associated with in vitro-produced embryos but virus is associated with a significant number of exposed embryos. In conclusion, this study indicates that the potential for transmission of BVDV via embryo transfer of in vitro-produced embryos is small given the amount of virus that was found to associate with individual embryos.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv20n1Ab154

© CSIRO 2007

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