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Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

356 BLASTOCYST DEVELOPMENT FROM DOMESTIC CAT OOCYTES INJECTED WITH DEHYDRATED SPERMATOZOA

A. Moisan, S. Leibo, J. Lynn, M. Gómez, C. Pope, K. Bondioli, B. Dresser and R. Godke

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 18(2) 285 - 285
Published: 14 December 2005

Abstract

Live offspring have been produced by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) of dehydrated spermatozoa into mouse and rabbit oocytes (Wakayama and Yanagimachi 1998 Nature Biotechnol. 16, 639; Liu et al. 2004 Biol. Reprod. 70, 1776). The objective of the present study was to determine the capability of dehydrated domestic cat spermatozoa to fertilize oocytes after ICSI. Spermatozoa were collected from three toms by ejaculation into an artificial vagina. Freshly collected samples were layered under 1 mL of Tyrode's salt solution supplemented with HEPES, BSA, glutamine, pyruvate, lactate, and 50 mM ethyleneglyeotetraacetic acid (EGTA) pH = 8.2-8.4, and allowed to swim-up during a 12-min incubation at 38°C. From the upper 600 ¼L of the sperm suspension, four 100-¼L aliquots were collected and placed into 2-mL glass ampoules, plunged into liquid nitrogen (LN2), freeze dried at -43°C to -45°C and 44 to 76 × 10-3 mbar pressure, and stored at 4°C. Four to twelve 10-¼L aliquots of the same suspension were placed onto glass slides, air-dried for 30 min, and stored in a desiccator at room temperature. Domestic cat oocytes were collected from minced ovaries and allowed to mature in vitro for 22 to 24 h. After maturation, oocytes were either fertilized in vitro (IVF; n = 36), or sperm injected (ICSI) with fresh or refrigerated (n = 74), freeze-dried (n = 45), or air-dried (n = 45) spermatozoa. After ICSI or IVF, oocytes were cultured in a three-step-sequential medium (Gómez et al. 2004 Cloning Stem Cells 6, 247) for up to 8 days. Cleavage and development to the blastocyst stage was assessed on Days 2 and 8 of culture, respectively. Cleavage rates after IVF (56%), ICSI with freeze-dried (60%), or ICSI with fresh spermatozoa (59%) were higher than those obtained after ICSI with air-dried spermatozoa (35%; P < 0.05). Blastocyst development after ICSI treatments was obtained only with fresh spermatozoa (9%), and was lower than that obtained after IVF (25%; P < 0.05). Recently, one hatching blastocyst was produced when oocytes (n = 18) were exposed to calcium ionophore 2 h after ICSI with freeze-dried sperm. This is the first report that domestic cat embryos can be produced in vitro by injecting oocytes with dried spermatozoa.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv18n2Ab356

© CSIRO 2005

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