In vitro developmental competence of bovine demi-embryos generated by blastomere separation and blastocyst bisection.
A E Ynsaurralde-RivoltaAndrés GambiniV AlberioVirginia SavyL RatnerA GubermanC Vázquez EchegarayM I GismondiA CurráRomina J BevacquaDaniel Felipe SalamonePublished in: Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene (2024)
The efficiency of bovine in vitro embryo production can be significantly improved by splitting embryos at different stages. However, the blastocyst quality of in vitro-produced demi-embryos remains unexplored. The objective of this research was to compare embryo developmental rates and quality of bovine demi-embryos produced by two different strategies: (a) embryo bisection (BSEC) and (b) 2-cell blastomere separation (BSEP). To determine demi-embryos quality, we evaluated total blastocyst cell number and proportion of SOX2+ cells. Additionally, the expression of SOX2, NANOG, OCT4, CDX2, IFNT, BAX and BCL genes and let-7a and miRNA-30c Micro RNAs was analysed. BSEP resulted in improved blastocyst development, higher ICM cells and a significantly higher expression of IFNΤ than demi-embryos produced by BSEC. Let-7a, which is associated with low pregnancy establishment was detected in BSEC, while miRNA-30c expression was observed in all treatments. In conclusion, BSEP of 2-cell embryos is more efficient to improve in vitro bovine embryo development and to produce good quality demi-embryos based on ICM cell number and the expression pattern of the genes explored compared to BSEC.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- induced apoptosis
- single cell
- pregnancy outcomes
- cell therapy
- cell cycle arrest
- binding protein
- stem cells
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- quality improvement
- dendritic cells
- dna methylation
- liquid chromatography
- cell death
- preterm birth
- cell proliferation
- pi k akt
- genome wide identification
- cancer stem cells