Cloned Foal Born from Postmortem-Obtained Ear Sample Refrigerated for 5 Days Before Fibroblast Isolation and Decontamination of the Infected Monolayer Culture.
Jenin V CortezKylie HardwickeChristopher G GrupenMuren HerridZoltan MachatyGábor VajtaPublished in: Cellular reprogramming (2024)
A 6-year-old mare, a valuable polo horse, died of complications following postcolic surgery. To preserve its genetics, ear skin samples were collected immediately after death and stored in an equine embryo transfer medium at 4°C for 5 days. After trypsin digestion, monolayer fibroblast cultures were established, but signs of massive bacterial infection were found in all of them. As an ultimate attempt for rescue, rigorously and repeatedly washed cells were individually cultured in all wells of four 96-well dishes. New monolayers were established from the few wells without contamination and used for somatic cell nuclear transfer. Four of the six Day 7 blastocysts derived from 14 reconstructed zygotes were transferred in four naturally cycling mares on Day 5 after ovulation. The embryo transfers resulted in 2 pregnancies, one from a fresh and one from a vitrified blastocyst. The vitrified embryo transfer resulted in a healthy offspring, now 21 months old, genetically and phenotypically identical to the somatic cell donor animal.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- cell therapy
- induced apoptosis
- minimally invasive
- gestational age
- copy number
- stem cells
- risk assessment
- wound healing
- type diabetes
- drinking water
- preterm birth
- coronary artery bypass
- adipose tissue
- high intensity
- oxidative stress
- risk factors
- metabolic syndrome
- health risk
- high fat diet
- preterm infants
- low birth weight
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- surgical site infection