Short- and Long-Term Storage of Non-Domesticated European Mouflon ( Ovis aries musimon ) Cumulus-Oocyte Complexes Recovered in Field Conditions.
Letizia TemerarioVincenzo CicirelliNicola Antonio MartinoAlice CarbonariMatteo BurgioLorenza FrattinaGiovanni Michele LacalandraAnnalisa RizzoMaria Elena Dell'AquilaPublished in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2024)
Reproductive biotechnologies can be used as a supporting tool, through gamete conservation and in vitro embryo production, in the preservation of invaluable and irreplaceable animal genetic resources. In the present study, immature mouflon cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) collected from ovariectomized female ovaries underwent short- or long-term conservation (24 h maintained in Earle's/Hank's (EH) medium or vitrification) under field conditions and afterwards transported to the laboratory where they were cultured for in vitro maturation (IVM) and assessed for oocyte meiotic competence and bioenergetic-oxidative status. Utilization of both storage techniques led to COC morphology preservation, as well as cumulus expansion and oocyte meiotic resumption after the IVM procedure. Quantitative bioenergetic-oxidative parameters were reduced in vitrified oocytes compared with EH ones. Immature COC storage needs to be optimized in both domesticated and non-domesticated sheep as a part of the strategy to avoid the loss of valuable genotypes of these animal species.