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Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

188 EFFECTS OF CULTURE MEDIUM AND PROTEIN SUPPLEMENTATION ON mRNA EXPRESSION OF IN VITRO-PRODUCED PREIMPLANTATION BOVINE EMBRYOS

M. N. Purpera, C. B. Ballard, A. M. Giraldo, D. Hylan, R. A. Godke and K. R. Bondioli

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 20(1) 173 - 174
Published: 12 December 2007

Abstract

Numerous studies have reported aberrant gene expression levels in embryos attributed to suboptimal culture conditions. This study investigated the effects of different culture systems and protein sources on the development of IVP embryos as measured by cleavage and blastocyst rates, cell number, and relative abundance levels of Oct-4, Connexin 43, Nanog, and glucose transporter-1 (Glut-1) when compared with in vivo embryos. Experiment (Exp) 1 compared IVP embryos cultured in either synthetic oviductal fluid (SOFaa) or potassium simplex optimized medium (KSOMaa) supplemented with amino acids. Exp 2 compared the same two culture systems with and without the addition of calf serum (CS). Oocytes were matured for 22 h, fertilized in vitro, and then cultured in the appropriate treatment medium. RNA was extracted from pools of blastocysts, reverse transcribed to cDNA, and primer-specific amplified via Q-PCR. Exp 1 analyzed 10 pools per treatment, and either 10 (in vivo) or 11 pools were analyzed per treatment in Exp 2. One-way ANOVA followed by multiple pair-wise comparisons using Tukey's test was used to detect differences between treatments and in vivo embryos (P < 0.05). Results from both experiments indicated that, despite similar cleavage and blastocyst rates among treatments, significant differences were detected at the mRNA level and in cell numbers between treatments. In Exp 1, Oct-4 was found to have a mean abundance mRNA level significantly greater in KSOMaa-cultured blastocysts than in either SOFaa-cultured blastocysts or in vivo embryos. The same pattern of upregulation of Oct-4 in KSOMaa or KSOMaa with CS-cultured blastocysts was detected in Exp 2. In contrast to that reported by others, Connexin 43 was not expressed at detectable levels in the in vivo embryos analyzed in our studies. Connexin 43 was not detected in IVP blastocysts used in Exp 1. Conversely, Connexin 43 was detected in KSOMaa, SOFaa, and SOFaa with CS-cultured blastocysts in Exp 2. There was no significant difference in expression of the ICM-specific transcript Nanog in either experiment. Blastocysts cultured in SOFaa with CS or KSOMaa had a significant upregulation of Glut-1 when compared with other treatments and in vivo embryos. Overall, the transcript levels of the majority of the genes analyzed were altered by the in vitro culture condition. Differences continue to be observed between in vitro-cultured and in vivo embryos, and until these differences are minimized, aberrations in in vitro development will continue to arise. Further research will possibly modify the current culture conditions, allowing for the production of in vitro embryos of higher developmental potential similar to that observed in in vivo-derived embryos.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv20n1Ab188

© CSIRO 2007

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