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Vertebrate reproductive science and technology
RESEARCH ARTICLE

344 EFFECTS OF BMP4 AND ITS INHIBITOR, NOGGIN, ON OOCYTE MATURATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF BOVINE PREIMPLANTING EMBRYOS

I. La Rosa A , R. Fernandez y Martín A , D. A. Paz B and D. F. Salamone A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Agriculture Faculty, University of Buenos Aires, Argentine;

B Exact and Natural Siences Faculty, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina

Reproduction, Fertility and Development 22(1) 328-328 https://doi.org/10.1071/RDv22n1Ab344
Published: 8 December 2009

Abstract

BMP4 regulates different events during development in all vertebrates and Noggin is one of its powerful inhibitors that blocks BMP4 interaction with its receptors (Groppe et al. 2002). In this work, the effect of these factors on bovine oocyte maturation and subsequent embryo development has been investigated. COCs were aspirated from abattoir ovaries and in vitro-matured for 22 h or 24 h in a 5% CO2 humidified atmosphere at 39°C in TCM containing 0.6% BSA, 2 mM FSH, 10 mM cysteamine, 1% antibiotic and 1% pyruvate, control group (C), plus 100 ng mL-1 of BMP4 (B), or 100 ngmL-1 of Noggin (NOG). Oocytes were stained with Hoechst 33342 and classified by their nuclear stage. Effects on embryo development were investigated for embryos produced by parthenogenic activation (PA) and IVF For PA, denuded oocytes were chemically activated in 5 μM ionomycine for 4 min, and immediately incubated in 1.9 mM of 6-dimethilaminopurine for 3 h. For IVF, frozen-thawed semen was centrifuged and resuspended in Bracket and Oliphant (BO) solution and incubated with 22 h matured COCs for 5 h. Embryos were cultured in CR2 medium free of serum and co-culture. Cleavage and blastocyst formation were registered at Day 2 and 9 respectively. Fischer’s exact test was used and P ≤ 0.05 was considered significant. Nuclear progression was not affected by maturation treatments [% of MII: 79.4(C, n = 102), 72.4 (B, n = 98), 80.9 (NOG, n = 89)]. For PA, both factors significantly increased cleavage rates [%: 51.7 (C, n = 284), 65 (B, n = 186), 62.1 (NOG, n = 198)] while blastocyst rates were not affected [%: 8.8 (C), 7.5 (B), and 8.6 (NOG)]. On the other hand, for IVF, cleavage rate was statistically lower for Noggin group [%: 70.7 (C, n = 140), 71.3 (B, n = 157), 64 (NOG, n = 159)] while blastocyst rates were similar between groups [%: 15.7 (C), 13.4 (B), 14.5 (NOG)]. Any of the added factors affected cell number of the embryos at Day 2. Blastocysts did not differ in the number of cells at Day 9 (Student’s t-test was used) neither for PA [mean ± SD: 100 ± 33 (C, n = 9), 88 ± 14 (B, n = 3) and 68 ± 8,(NOG, n = 3)] nor for IVF [mean ± SD: 90 ± 24 (C, n = 9), 132 ± 18 (B, n =4) and 99 ± 8 (NOG, n = 3)]. It is noticeable that addition of these factors during in vitro maturation showed different effects on subsequent embryo development depending on whether the embryos were PA or IVF. Probably, these responses represent differences in the BMP signaling system between these embryos which could be associated with different imprinting pattern. Further experiments are needed to elucidate clearly the mechanisms implicated. To our knowledge, this is the first work to study BMP4 inhibition during bovine in vitro maturation.

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