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

207 OVARIAN STIMULATION, TRANSVAGINAL, ULTRASOUND-GUIDED OOCYTE RETRIEVAL, ICSI AND BLASTOCYST PRODUCTION IN SEQUENTIAL MEDIA IN THE WESTERN LOWLAND GORILLA (GORILLA GORILLA GORILLA)

N.M. Loskutoff A , T.R. Bowsher B , J.A. Chatfield C , G.A. Stones C , J.W. Ramey D , L. Zhang E , M. Putman E , C. Boland F , D. Wharton G and D.K. Gardner H
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo, Omaha, NE, USA. email: repro@omahazoo.com;

B Dallas Zoo, Dallas, TX, USA;;

C Gladys Porter Zoo, Brownsville, TX, USA;;

D Heartland Center for Reproductive Medicine, Omaha, NE, USA;;

E Baylor Center for Reproductive Health, Dallas, TX, USA;;

F Aloka Science and Humanity, Wallingford, CT, USA;;

G Wildlife Conservation Society, Central Park Zoo, New York, NY, USA;;

H Colorado Center for Reproductive Medicine, Denver, CO, USA.

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 16(2) 225-225 https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv16n1Ab207
Submitted: 1 August 2003  Accepted: 1 October 2003   Published: 2 January 2004

Abstract

Two young (ages: 15 and 16 yr;; studbook # 947 and # 939, respectively) parous female gorillas were initially primed with daily oral monophasic estrogen/progesterone treatment (Ovcon 35: Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., Princeton, NJ, USA) for 3 mo to synchronize their menstrual cycles. After withdrawing treatment, urine was tested daily for occult blood (Hemastix;; Baxter Healthcare Corp., Deerfield, IL, USA). On days 3–10 following the onset of menses (Day 1), ovarian activity was stimulated with 225 IU human FSH im (Repronex;; Ferring Pharmaceuticals, New South Wales, Australia). Then on Days 6–8 this treatment was combined with 25 mg GnRH antagonist im (Antagon;; Organon, West Orange, NJ, USA) to prevent premature endogenous LH release. Final oocyte maturation was stimulated 36 h after the last FSH/GnRH treatment with 10,000 IU hCG im (Profasi;; Serono Lab., Hingham/Rockland, MA, USA) and oocyte retrieval was performed 36 h post-hCG administration in sternal recumbency (knee-chest) using a 3–6 mHz probe, 17-ga needles and 87 mm Hg (VMAR-5000 Regulated Vacuum Pump;; Cook Veterinary Products). Both gorillas displayed a thickened endometrium, and approximately 6 (# 947) to 10 (# 939) maturing follicles (10–15 mm) were detected in each animal. In female # 947, one oocyte was collected but peritoneal fluid and pathology (hydrosalpinx) were also diagnosed and the right ovary showed no follicular development. A total of 3 oocytes were recovered in highly viscous follicular fluid containing massive amounts of cumulus cells. They were transported in a HEPES-buffered transport medium in a portable incubator (CryoLogic, Mulgrave, Victoria, Australia) at 37°C by airline immediately from Brownsville to Dallas, TX, USA, and within 6-h post-retrieval were fertilized by ICSI using cryopreserved sperm collected by rectal probe electrostimulation (age: est. 40 yr ; studbook # 268). The fertilized oocytes were cultured in Gardner’s Sequential Medium at 37°C in 6% CO2 all three cleaved and developed to blastocysts by 115 h post-ICSI. One high-quality expanding blastocyst was transported back to Brownsville, TX, and transferred transcervically into the oocyte donor (studbook # 939), and two fair-quality blastocysts were transported overnight to Omaha, NE, and transferred into a synchronized gorilla recipient (age: 29 yr; studbook # 543/91). Weekly urine samples from the two embryo transfer recipients are being tested for pregnancy diagnosis using OvuQuick test strips (Quidel, San Diego, CA, USA). Acknowledgments: This research was supported in part by the Morris Animal Foundation (Ruth Morris Keesling Animal Health Study).