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Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

335 CYTOPLASMIC MICROINJECTION OF EXOGENOUS DNA IN IN VITRO AND IN VIVO DERIVED SHEEP EMBRYOS

F. Pereyra-Bonnet A , A. Gibbons B , M. Cueto B , R. Bevacqua A , L. Escobar B and D. Salamone A
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A FA-UBA, Buenos Aires, Argentina;

B INTA, Bariloche, Argentina

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 23(1) 263-263 https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv23n1Ab335
Published: 7 December 2010

Abstract

Microinjection of DNA into the male pronucleus is a commonly used method to generate transgenic animals. However, it is only moderately efficient in several species because it requires proper male pronuclear visualisation, which occurs only in a narrow window of time in mice. The cytoplasmic microinjection of exogenous DNA (eDNA) is an alternative method that has not been fully investigated. Our objective was to evaluate if cytoplasmic microinjection of eDNA is capable of producing genetically modified embryos. In vitro and in vivo derived sheep embryos were cytoplasmically microinjected with pCX-EGFP previously incubated (5 min in a PVP droplet) with oolemma-cytoplasm fragments obtained from donor oocytes by microsurgery. A control group using microinjected plasmid alone was included in the in vivo procedure. For in vitro microinjection, IVF embryos were microinjected with circular plasmid with promoter (50 or 500 ng μL–1) or without promoter (50 ng μL–1) at 6 h after fertilization. The IVF was performed following (Brackett and Olliphant 1975 Biol. Reprod. 12, 260–274) with 15 × 106 spermatozoa mL–1, and presumptive zygotes were cultured in SOF. The expression of enhance green fluorescent protein (EGFP) was determined under blue light. For in vivo microinjection, embryos from superovulated sheep (by standard procedures) were recovered and microinjected with 50 ng μL–1 of linearized plasmid without promoter at 12 h after laparoscopic insemination with frozen semen (100 × 106 spermatozoa per sheep). Plasmid without promoter was used to avoid any possible cytotoxic effect produced by EGFP expression. The microinjection of IVF embryos with 50 ng μL–1 of plasmid was the best condition to produce embryos expressing eDNA (n = 96; 46.9% cleaved; 12.2% blastocysts; 53.0 and 4.1% of green embryos and blastocysts, respectively). Variables between the groups with or without promoter IVF were not statistically different (Fisher test: P < 0.05); however, when 500 ng μL–1 was microinjected, no blastocysts were obtained. In the in vivo embryo production group, 111 presumptive zygotes were microinjected (n = 37; with plasmid alone) from 16 donor sheep (11.5 ± 4.0 corpora lutea; 8.4 ± 4.8 presumptive zygotes recovered; 74.3% recovery rate). The mean time from injection to cleavage was 18.0 ± 4.5 h, and the percentage of cleavage and damage (due to the embryo injection) were >70% and <10%, respectively. Fifty-eight good quality embryos were transferred into the oviducts of 19 surrogate ewes; 12 of them are pregnant (63.1%). The presence of green IVF embryos demonstrates that eDNA was transported to the nucleus after cytoplasmic injection. We believe that the multi-fold increase (50- to 100-fold) in plasmid concentration compared with that used by others was the key step to our successful cytoplasmic microinjection. Accordingly, the new/old methodology described in this study provides an easy DNA construct delivery system of interest for the implementation of early reprogramming events. In addition, results obtained in the near future using in vivo cytoplasmic microinjection with high concentrations of eDNA could revalidate this technique for producing genetically modified large animals.