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1.
Several concentrations of glycerol for cryoprotection and several concentrations of sucrose for cryoprotectant dilution were examined with frozen, thawed and cultured mouse embryos. Four hundred and eighty late morulae to early blastocyst stage embryos were collected from 35 superovulated mice (B6D2 x Swiss Webster crosses back-crossed to Swiss Webster males) 3-1/2 days after breeding. The embryos were transferred through increasing concentrations of glycerol in modified Dulbecco(1)s phosphate buffered saline (MDPBS) to reach three final concentrations of 1.0 M, 1.4 M and 1.8 M. The embryos were loaded in 0.5-ml French straws appropriately filled with the cryoprotectant and sucrose solutions for each treatment. The straws were cooled with a standard fast-freezing program to -35 degrees C, then plunged into liquid nitrogen. After 58 days of storage at -196 degrees C the straws were thawed in a 37 degrees C water bath. Cryoprotectant dilution was accomplished with a standard step-wise procedure or in the straw with one of three concentrations of sucrose solution (0.25 M, 0.5 M, 1.0 M) in MDPBS. The embryos were then washed twice in MDPBS, twice in Whitten's media for embryo culture and then placed in microdrops of Whitten's media under paraffin oil in a water saturated 5% CO(2) in air atmosphere at 37 degrees C. Embryos were observed 24 hours later for development to the expanded blastocyst stage. The proportion of embryos developing in vitro from the three glycerol concentrations were not significantly different with standard step-wise dilution procedures for glycerol removal. After step-wise cryoprotectant removal, blastocyst expansion occurred in 49%, 44% and 52% of embryos frozen in 1.0 M, 1.4 M and 1.8 M glycerol, respectively. The 1.0 M sucrose dilution of 1.0 M glycerol showed the highest development (60.5%) in vitro but was not significantly different from any of these three step-wise diluted glycerol concentrations. The step-wise dilution of the three glycerol concentrations and dilution of the 1.0 M glycerol and 1.0 M sucrose were all superior (P < 0.01) to any other dilution procedure examined.  相似文献   

2.
A total of 228 embryos was nonsurgically collected from superovulated cows and dehydrated in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) or glycerol by a three-step procedure or a (T.I.T.) timed interval titration procedure. Embryos were loaded in straws, frozen by cooling to -6.0 degrees C at 1.0 degrees C/min, and seeded, followed by cooling to -30 degrees C at 0.3 degrees C/min and to -38 degrees C at 0.1 degrees C/min. At this time the straws were plunged into liquid nitrogen at -195 degrees C. Embryos were thawed in a 27 degrees C or 37 degrees C water bath and rehydrated by a six-step, three-step (sucrose) or one-step (sucrose) procedure. This yielded a 2 x 2 x 2 x 3 factorial treatment structure. Survival was based on development after 12 h in in vitro culture. The only significant single factor affecting survival was the initial quality grade of the embryo. Grades 1 and 2 embryos survived more often than Grade 3 embryos (P < 0.05). Using DMSO as the cryoprotectant resulted in better scores for the post dehydration to post thawing interval (P = 0.02). For both intervals, post dehydration to post thawing and post thawing to post rehydration, the previous quality grade was significant in determining the subsequent quality grade (P < 0.01). At each step of the freeze-thaw process, the embryos became progressively less morphologically intact.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of freezing container and method of glycerol removal on in vitro survival of frozen-thawed Day 7 bovine embryos was investigated. Two hundred and fifteen embryos were frozen in ampules or straws, in either vertical or horizontal position and at a cooling rate of 0.3 degrees C/minute from -7 degrees C to -35 degrees C, before being plunged into liquid nitrogen. Samples were thawed in a water bath at +35 degrees C and glycerol was removed by either step-wise dilution (increments 0.25 M) or by exposure to 1.0 M sucrose for 10 minutes. A total of 197 embryos was recovered post-thaw (91%) with an overall survival after 1, 3, 6 and 24 hours in culture of 87, 81, 71, and 23%, respectively. Embryonic quality and percent survival, as assessed morphologically, did not change significantly between 1 and 3 hours but decreased significantly between 6 and 24 hours in culture (p < 0.05). Survival at 24 hours was significantly higher after removal of the cryoprotectant with sucrose when compared to the step-wise glycerol dilution (p < 0.05). Overall, embryonic survival in straws equaled that in ampules; freezing orientation of straws did not affect results. Further, glycerol removal with sucrose tended to yield survival superior to that provided by a step-wise dilution technique.  相似文献   

4.
The survival of whole and bisected rabbit morulae cryopreserved by the vitrification method was investigated. The embryos were loaded in a column of vitrification solution (VS, a mixture of 25% glycerol and 25% 1, 2-propanediol in PBS+16% calf serum), which was located between two columns of 1 M sucrose solution in a plastic straw. The embryos were frozen by being plunged into liquid nitrogen and thawed in a water bath at 20 degrees C. Two methods of loading embryos into straws were used: the single and double column vitrification solution methods. The embryonic survival rates between these two methods were compared. Seventy-one (86.6%) out of 82 morulae vitrified in double column straws developed into the blastocyst stage in vitro. Eleven (18.3%) live fetuses were obtained after the transfer of 60 frozen-thawed morulae to four recipients. By contrast, the survival rate (36.5%, 27 74 ) of embryos vitrified in the single column straws was significantly lower (P<0.05). The vitrification solution of the single column straws became opaque, indicating ice-crystal formation, upon thawing in 5 of 11 straws, which was assumed to have damaged the embryos. More than 80% (29 36 ) of the bisected morulae frozen and thawed in the double column straws developed to the blastocyst stage in vitro when cryoprotectant was diluted stepwise with 1 M and 0.25 M sucrose solution. When the cryoprotectant was removed by one-step dilution with 1 M sucrose solution, swelling in blastomeres was observed and the development rate of the recovered embryos decreased (45.8%, 11 24 ). These results indicate that the vitrification method employed in our experiment is not only efficient for the cryopreservation of rabbit morulae, but it can also be used for the preservation of bisected rabbit morulae, which had not been successful using previous methods.  相似文献   

5.
Ware CB  Boland MP 《Theriogenology》1987,27(5):721-728
Two hundred fifty-one ovine embryos were frozen in different levels of glycerol (1.0, 1.4, 2.0 or 2.8M) and thawed into one of four sucrose levels (0, 0.25, 1.0 or 2.0M) to determine the optimal glycerol-sucrose combination for one-step, in-straw thawing. Sucrose was toxic at low glycerol levels and mandatory at high levels. The 1.0M sucrose level with either 1.4 or 2.0M glycerol was optimal for one-step cryoprotectant removal.  相似文献   

6.
Ding FH  Xiao ZZ  Li J 《Theriogenology》2007,68(5):702-708
The objective was to identify an appropriate cryoprotectant and protocol for vitrification of red sea bream (Pagrus major) embryos. The toxicity of five single-agent cryoprotectants, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), propylene glycol (PG), ethylene glycol (EG), glycerol (GLY), and methyl alcohol (MeOH), as well as nine cryoprotectant mixtures, were investigated by comparing post-thaw hatching rates. Two vitrifying protocols, a straw method and a solid surface vitrification method (copper floating over liquid nitrogen), were evaluated on the basis of post-thaw embryo morphology. Exposure to single-agent cryoprotectants (10% concentration for 15 min) was not toxic to embryos, whereas for higher concentrations (20 and 30%) and a longer duration of exposure (30 min), DMSO and PG were better tolerated than the other cryoprotectants. Among nine cryoprotectant mixtures, the combination of 20% DMSO+10% PG+10% MeOH had the lowest toxicity after exposure for 10 min or 15 min. High percentages of morphologically intact embryos, 50.6+/-16.7% (mean+/-S.D.) and 77.8+/-15.5%, were achieved by the straw vitrifying method (20.5% DMSO+15.5% acetamide+10% PG, thawing at 43 degrees C and washing in 0.5M sucrose solution for 5 min) and by the solid surface vitrification method (40% GLY, thawing at 22 degrees C and washing in 0.5M sucrose solution for 5 min). After thawing, morphological changes in the degenerated embryos included shrunken yolks and ruptured chorions. Furthermore, thawed embryos that were morphologically intact did not consistently survive incubation.  相似文献   

7.
Lim JM  Ko JJ  Hwang WS  Chung HM  Niwa K 《Theriogenology》1999,51(7):1303-1310
In vitro matured bovine oocytes at the metaphase-II stage were slowly frozen in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) containing 1.0 M glycerol, 1.0 M dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) or 1.0 M propylene glycol (PROH). When thawed rapidly, more (P<0.05) oocytes were morphologically normal after being frozen with DMSO (86%) or PROH (83%) than with glycerol (62%). When inseminated in vitro with frozen-thawed bull spermatozoa, higher (P<0.05) penetration rates were observed in DMSO (79%) or PROH (76%) than in glycerol (48%). The percentages of oocytes developing to the 2-cell stage at 48 h postinsemination were also significantly (P<0.05) higher in DMSO (51%) and PROH (54%) than in glycerol (33%). However, a significant increase in the proportions of 8-cell embryos (46 vs 21 to 26%; P<0.05) at 72 h postinsemination and morulae (14 vs. 6 to 8%; P<0.05) was derived from oocytes frozen with PROH than with DMSO or glycerol. In conclusion, the type of cryoprotectant used is one of the critical factors affecting developmental competence of bovine oocytes frozen at the metaphase-II stage. For this stage of oocytes, PROH was the most effective, yielding a large number of 8-cell embryos and morulae than either glycerol or DMSO in a slow freezing method combined with a 3-step thawing protocol.  相似文献   

8.
The toxic effects of sucrose and the conditions of in-straw glycerol removal after freezing and thawing were studied using Day-3 mouse embryos. At 20 degrees C, exposure to less than or equal to 1.0 M-sucrose for periods up to 30 min had no adverse effects on freshly collected embryos. At 25 and 36 degrees C, however, greater than or equal to 1.0 M-sucrose significantly reduced the developmental potential (P less than 0.001). In the freezing experiments the embryos were placed in 0.5 ml straws containing 40 microliters freezing medium separated by an air bubble from 440 microliters sucrose solution. The straws were frozen rapidly in the vapour about 1 cm above the surface of liquid nitrogen. The post-thaw viability was substantially better after sucrose dilution at 20 degrees C than at 36 degrees C. Mixing the freezing medium with the sucrose diluent immediately after thawing further improved the rate of survival relative to mixing just before freezing (P less than 0.001). The best survival was obtained when the freezing medium contained 3.0 M-glycerol + 0.25 M-sucrose; it was mixed with the diluent after thawing and the glycerol was removed at 20 degrees C. Under such conditions the sucrose concentration in the diluent had no significant effect on the rate of development (0.5 M, 69%; 1.0 M, 73%; 1.5 M, 64%). The results show that during sucrose dilution the temperature should be strictly controlled and suggest that intracellular and extracellular concentrations of glycerol are important in the cryoprotection of embryos.  相似文献   

9.
In Study 1 over 2000 4- to 8-cell mouse embryos were randomly pooled and assigned to 1 of 12 treatment groups. A 2 X 2 X 3 factorial design was used to analyze two types of cryoprotectant/post-thaw (PT) dilutions (dimethyl sulfoxide [Me2SO]/stepwise dilution versus glycerol/sucrose dilution), two storage containers (glass ampoules versus plastic straws), and three cooling treatments. Two commercial, controlled-rate freezing machines were examined, employing either nitrogen gas (Planer) or thermoelectric (Glacier) cooling. Embryos were cooled slowly (0.5 degrees C/min) to -35 or -80 degrees C and then cooled rapidly by transfer into liquid nitrogen (LN2). Thawed embryos were cultured for 24 hr after which developmental stage, post-thaw survival (PTS), embryo degeneration rate (EDR), quality grade (QG), and fluorescein diacetate viability grade (VG) were assessed. Overall, PTS and EDR were similar (P greater than 0.05) among the three freezing unit/plunge temperature treatments. Cumulative results of container and cryoprotectant/PT dilution treatments consistently demonstrated greater PTS, QG, and VG ratings and lower EDR values when embryos were frozen in ampoules using glycerol/sucrose dilution. Embryos treated with Me2SO/stepwise dilution were particularly sensitive to freezing damage when stored in plastic straws and plunged into LN2 at -35 degrees C. Study 2 was directed at determining whether Study 1 methods for diluting Me2SO-protected embryos markedly affected PTS rates. Post-thaw culture percentages were no different (P greater than 0.05) for four- to eight-cell Me2SO-treated embryos frozen in ampoules (using the forced-LN2 device), thawed, and diluted either conventionally in reduced concentrations of Me2SO or in the sucrose treatment normally accorded glycerolated embryos.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Status of cryopreservation of embryos from domestic animals.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The discovery of glycerol as an effective cryoprotectant for spermatozoa led to research on cryopreservation of embryos. The first successful offspring from frozen-thawed embryos were reported in the mouse and later in other laboratory animals. Subsequently, these techniques were applied to domestic animals. Research in cryopreservation techniques have included studies concerning the type and concentration of cryoprotectant, cooling and freezing rates, seeding and plunging temperatures, thawing temperatures and rates, and methods of cryoprotectant removal. To date, successful results based on pregnancy rates have been obtained with cryopreserved cow, sheep, goat, and horse embryos but no success has been reported in swine. Post-thaw embryo survival has been shown to be dependent on the initial embryo quality, developmental stage, and species. The freezing techniques most frequently used in research and by commercial companies are identified as "equilibrium" cryopreservation. In this technique the embryos are placed in a concentrated glycerol solution (1.4 M in PBS supplemented with BSA) at room temperature and the glycerol is allowed to equilibrate for a 20-min period. During the cooling process the straws are seeded (-4 to -7 degrees C) and cooling is continued at a rate of 0.3 to 0.5 degree C/min to -30 degrees C when bovine embryos may be plunged into LN2. Sheep embryos are successfully frozen with ethylene glycol (1.5 M) or DMSO (1.5 M) rather than with glycerol. Horse embryos have been frozen in 0.5 rather than 0.25 cc straws but with cooling rates and seeding and plunging temperatures similar to those used with bovine embryos. Swine embryos have shown a high sensitivity to temperature and cryoprotectants probably due to their high lipid content and a temperature decrease to 15 or 10 degrees C causes a dramatic increase in the percentage of degenerated embryos. However, a recent study has shown that hatched pig blastocysts survived exposure below 15 degrees C. Recent research has shown that embryos may also be frozen by a "nonequilibrium" method. This rapid freezing by vitrification consists of dehydration of the embryo at room temperature by a very highly concentrated vitrification media (3.5 to 4.0 M) and a very rapid freeze that avoids the formation of ice allowing the solution to change from a liquid to a glassy state. Vitrification solutions consist of combinations of sucrose, glycerol, and propylene glycol. With this technique, 50% pregnancy rates have been reported with the bovine blastocyst.  相似文献   

11.
Voelkel SA  Hu YX 《Theriogenology》1992,37(3):687-697
Four experiments were conducted to define a system for the direct transfer of frozen-thawed bovine embryos to recipient females. In Experiment I, nonsurgically recovered embryos were frozen in 1.5 M ethylene glycol (EG), 1.5 M propylene glycol (PG), 1.5 M DMSO or 1.4 M glycerol (GLY), and then thawed and placed directly into holding medium. Viability at 72 hours of post-thaw culture was 70, 11, 25 and 30% for the four groups, respectively. In Experiments II and III, 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0 M concentrations of EG were compared; a concentration of 1.5 M appeared to provide optimal cryopreservation and survival after direct rehydration. In Experiment IV, embryos were packaged in straws containing only 1.5 M EG, in straws containing a column of 1.5 M EG and the embryo and two columns of PB1 in a 1:3 ratio of volumes (EG PB1 ), or were frozen in 1.4 M glycerol. After thawing, embryos in EG and EG PB1 treatments were transferred directly to recipient females, while embryos frozen in GLY were rehydrated using a three-step procedure. In the first trial, pregnancy rates at approximately 60 days of gestation for embryos frozen in EG and GLY groups were 39 and 62%, respectively (P<0.10). In the second trial, the pregnancy rate for embryos frozen in EG PB1 was equal to that of embryos frozen in GLY (50% in both groups). These experiments demonstrate the potential for using ethylene glycol as a cryoprotectant for bovine embryos, thus permitting direct transfer of frozen-thawed embryos to recipient females.  相似文献   

12.
Mouse sperm has proven to be more difficult to cryopreserve than sperm of other mammalian species. Published reports show that only three cryoprotectant agents (CPAs), alone or combined, have been studied: glycerol and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), as permeating agents, and raffinose, as a nonpermeating agent. To date, the most consistent results for mouse sperm cryopreservation have been achieved by use of raffinose/skim milk as cryoprotectant with rapid cooling at 20 degrees C per minute. In this study, we compared the cryoprotection provided by permeating (glycerol, formamide, propanediol, DMSO, adonitol) or nonpermeating (lactose, raffinose, sucrose, trehalose, d-mannitol) compounds for freezing mouse sperm. Different solutions were made using 3% skim milk solution as the buffer or extender in which all different cryoprotectant agents were dissolved at a concentration of 0.3 M, with a final osmolality of approx. 400 mOsm. Sperm samples from CB6F1 (hybrid) and C57BL/6J (inbred) mice collected directly into each CPA were frozen/thawed under identical conditions. After thawing and CPA elimination (centrifugation) raffinose (59%), trehalose (61%), and sucrose (61%) sustained the best motility (P = < 0.1) of the nonpermeating agents, whereas the best of the permeating agents was DMSO (42%). Membrane integrity was analyzed and showed that the simple exposure (prefreeze) to sugars was less harmful than the exposure to glycols. Coincidentally, sperm frozen in trehalose (41%), raffinose (40.5%), and sucrose (37.5%) were the samples less injured among all different postthawed CPA tested. The in vitro fertilization results demonstrated that hybrid mouse spermatozoa frozen with sugars (lactose 80%, raffinose 80%, trehalose 79% of two-cell embryos production) were more fertile than those frozen with glycols (glycerol 11%).  相似文献   

13.
Cryopreservation of murine embryos with trehalose and glycerol   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:5  
Several concentrations of trehalose (0.0, 0.04, 0.1, 0.25 M) in combination with three concentrations of glycerol (1.0, 1.5, 2.0 M) were evaluated for the cryopreservation of murine embryos. Embryos were transferred through increasing concentrations of glycerol in Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline with 10% fetal calf serum (PBS + FCS) to reach the final glycerol concentrations. They were then randomly assigned to one of the concentrations of trehalose. A total of 506 morulae were packaged individually in 0.25-ml plastic straws and cooled from ambient temperature at 1.0 degrees C/min in a programmable methanol freezer. Embryos were seeded at -7 degrees C and then cooled to -25 degrees C at 0.3 degrees C/min before being plunged into liquid nitrogen. After thawing and a one-step dilution of glycerol, embryos were cultured for 48 hr and viability was determined by blastocoel formation. Highest viability (70.0%) after 48 hr in culture was obtained for embryos frozen in 1.5 M glycerol plus 0.10 M trehalose as compared to 31% viability for embryos frozen with glycerol alone. These observations suggest that trehalose can be used in combination with glycerol as a cryoprotectant and that a high rate of viability can be achieved after a one-step dilution of the cryoprotectants.  相似文献   

14.
A technique for freezing ram and bull spermatozoa in pellet form, using the cold surface of cattle fat was compared to other freezing procedures. Three freezing methods were compared to cryopreserve ram spermatozoa: 0.25 ml straws, pellets frozen on the cold surface of paraffin wax and pellets frozen on the cold surface of cattle fat. In addition, two cryoprotectants, glycerol or sucrose, in an egg yolk-Tris diluent were compared. Ram spermatozoa frozen as pellets on cattle fat exhibited higher percentages of motile cells after thawing (54%) than spermatozoa frozen in straws (49%) or as pellets on paraffin wax (42%, S.E.M. = 1; P < 0.05). However, the percentages of acrosome intact cells were similar for spermatozoa frozen as pellets (49%) and spermatozoa frozen in straws (48%; P > 0.05), but higher than for spermatozoa frozen as pellets on paraffin wax (39%, S.E.M. = 1; P > 0.05). Ram spermatozoa exhibited higher percentages of motile cells after thawing when the cryoprotectant was sucrose (51%) compared to glycerol (46%; P < 0.05). Similarly, acrosomal integrity was greater with sucrose (49%) than with glycerol (42%; P < 0.05). Bull spermatozoa exhibited higher percentages of motile cells after thawing, when cells were frozen in straws (47%) than in the pellet form, regardless of the surface on which the pellets were frozen (31-37%, S.E.M. = 3; P < 0.05). However, bull spermatozoa exhibited higher percentages of motile cells when frozen as pellets on the surface of cattle fat (66%) or dry ice (61%), than when frozen on paraffin wax (53%, S.E.M. = 4; P < 0.05). In conclusion, although bull spermatozoa survive cryopreservation more effectively in straws, ram spermatozoa can be cryopreserved as pellets on the cold surface of cattle fat using sucrose as the cryoprotectant. This technique is simple, requires little equipment, is less expensive than using straws and may prove useful for cryopreserving ram and possibly bull spermatozoa in developing countries.  相似文献   

15.
Ritar AJ  Campet M 《Theriogenology》2000,54(3):467-480
Methods of short-term storage and cryopreservation were examined for semen from striped trumpeter (Latris lineata). For fresh semen at 18 degrees C, the percentage of motile sperm declined rapidly from over 80% immediately after activation with sea water to less than 2% within 9 min after activation. The motility after activation of undiluted fresh sperm stored at 5 degrees C was maintained for two days and then declined markedly so that by the eighth day, sperm were mostly immotile after activation. The post-thawing motility was higher for sperm frozen with a non-activating diluent containing 2.84 M DMSO in saline (117 mM NaCl) than in an activating glycerol (2 M) medium in dilute sea water (300 mOsm). Post-thawing motility was higher for a dilution rate of 1:5 (semen:diluent) than 1:2 or 1:11 but was similar when frozen semen was thawed at 10 degrees, 20 degrees or 30 degrees C. For semen stored at a range of volumes as pellets frozen on dry ice (0.2 to 2.0 mL) or straws frozen in liquid nitrogen vapor (0.25 to 0.5 mL) and thawed in a waterbath at 20 degrees C, the post-thawing motilities were similar even though the patterns of cooling and thawing differed markedly between methods of freezing and sizes of pellets and straws.  相似文献   

16.
An integrated bovine embryo transfer program was conducted in collaboration with 11 Japanese prefectural livestock experiment stations. The program was conducted to evaluate the practicability of the direct transfer method for bovine embryos frozen-thawed in the presence of propylene glycol (PG) or ethylene glycol (EG) under on-farm conditions. Embryos at the compacted morula to expanded blastocyst stages were collected from superovulated donors on Day 7 or 8 after estrus and equilibrated in 1.6 M PG or 1.8 M EG in Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline (DPBS) supplemented with 20% heat-inactivated calf serum. Embryos were then loaded individually into a 0.25-ml straw and placed directly into a cooling chamber of a programmable freezer precooled to -7 degrees C. After 2 min, the straw was seeded, maintained at -7 degrees C for 8 min more, and then cooled to -30 degrees C either at 0.3 degree C/min or 0.5 degree C/min before being plunged into liquid nitrogen. Embryos at the same stages were also frozen in the presence of 1.4 M glycerol (GLY) by a conventional method, which served as a control. The frozen embryos were thawed by allowing the straws to stand in air for 5 to 10 sec and then immersing them in a 30 degrees C water bath. Embryos frozen-thawed in the presence of PG or EG were nonsurgically transferred into the uterine horn without diluting the cryoprotectant. Embryos frozen-thawed in the presence of GLY were nonsurgically transferred after removing GLY either by the stepwise method (GLY-I) or by in situ dilution with 0.3 M sucrose solution (GLY-II). A total of 1,273 (PG: 400, EG: 418, GLY-I: 177, GLY-II; 278) frozen-thawed embryos was transferred into recipients, yielding 545 pregnancies (overall: 42.8%, PG: 36.0%, EG; 44.7%, GLY-I; 48.6%, GLY-II; 46.0%). The pregnancy rate with PG was significantly lower than that with EG or GLY-II (P < 0.05). The pregnancy rate was affected by the type of cryoprotectant, the region where the embryo transfer program was carried out, the developmental stage of the embryos, the parity of the recipients, and corpus luteum (CL) quality of the recipients. There were no differences in rates of abortion and stillbirth among the 3 cryoprotectants. The present study demonstrates that EG can be effectively used as a cryoprotectant for freezing and direct transfer of bovine embryos, and that the direct transfer method is applicable under on-farm conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Bovine oocytes surrounded with compact cumulus cells were cultured for 20 to 22 hours (38.5 degrees C, 5% CO(2)) in modified TCM-199 medium supplemented with 5% superovulated cow serum (SCS) and inseminated by in vitro capacitated spermatozoa. Day 7 to 8 embryos were equilibrated for 10 minutes in 1.3 M methyl cellosolve (MC), 1.1 M diethylene glycol (DEG), 1.8 M ethylene glycol (EG), 1.6 M propylene glycol (PG) and 1.1 M 1, 3-butylene glycol (BG) solutions. They were then loaded into 0.25-ml straws, placed into an alcohol bath freezer at 0 degrees C, cooled from 0 degrees C to -6 degrees C at -1 degrees C/minute, seeded, held for 10 minutes, and cooled again at -0.3 degrees C or -0.5 degrees C/minute to -30 degrees C. Straws were then plunged and stored in liquid nitrogen. After thawing in 30 degrees C water, the embryos were rehydrated in TCM-199 medium and then cultured for 48 hours in TCM-199 plus 5% SCS. Embryos were considered viable if they progressed to later developmental stages with good morphology. Some of the embryos frozen in each cryoprotectant were thawed and transferred nonsurgically without removing the cryoprotectant. Hatched embryos survived freezing and one-step dilution as follows: EG (50.0%), MC (53.6%), DEG (56.9%), PG (58.0%) and BG (11.5%). The survival rate of embryos cooled at -0.3 degrees C vs -0.5 degrees C/minute was not significantly different (P>0.05), however, blastocysts hatched most often (P<0.01) in vitro when cooled at a rate of -0.3 degrees C/minute (64.6%, 31 48 ) than at -0.5 degrees C/minute (22.6%, 12 53 ). Pregnancy rates resulting from embryos frozen in the different cryoprotectants were as follows: MC (48%, 10 21 ); DEG (30%, 3 10 ); EG (74%, 20 27 ); and PG (40%, 4 10 ). These results indicate that MC, DEG, EG and PG have utility as cryoprotectants for the freezing and thawing of IVF bovine embryos.  相似文献   

18.
Day 6 1 2 -7 1 2 cow embryos were frozen in 1.4 M glycerol in PBS, at 0.3 degrees C/min to -30 (group I), -35 (group II), and -40 degrees C (group III) before being plunged into liquid nitrogen. They were subsequently thawed by direct transfer to water at 37 degrees C. In Experiment I, embryos frozen and thawed were cultured in vitro, 12 out of 19 embryos (63%) survived and there were no significant (p > 0.05) differences in survival rates among the three freezing groups. In Experiment II, 29 embryos frozen to -30 or -35 degrees C were transferred non-surgically to heifers on day 7. Seventeen of 29 recipients (59%) were pregnant at day 60. Five embryos frozen to -35 degrees C resulted in 5 pregnancies (100%) after thawing and surgical transfer.  相似文献   

19.
This study was conducted to examine the effect of a quick-freezing protocol on morphological survival and in vitro development of mouse embryos cryopreserved in ethylene glycol (EG) at different preimplantation stages. One-cell embryos were harvested from 6-to 8-wk-old CB6F1 superovulated mice, 20 to 23 h after pairing with males of the same strain and hCG injection. The embryos were cultured in human tubal fluid (HTF) containing 4 mg/ml BSA under mineral oil at 37 degrees C in 5% CO(2) plus 95% room air at maximal humidity. Twenty-four to 96 h after collection, the embryos were removed from culture and frozen at the 2 cell, 4 to 8-cell, compact morula, early blastocyst, expanding blastocyst and expanded blastocyst stages. To perform the quick-freeze procedure, embryos were equilibrated in Dulbecco's phosphate buffered saline (DPBS) + 10 % fetal bovine serum (FBS) + 0.25 M sucrose + 3 M ethylene glycol (freeze medium) for 20 min at room temperature (22 to 26 degrees C) and loaded in a single column of freeze medium into 0.25-ml straws (4 to 5 embryos per straw). The straws were held in liquid nitrogen vapor for 2 min and immersed in liquid nitrogen. Embryos were thawed by gentle agitation in a 37 degrees C water bath for 20 sec and transferred to DPBS + 10 % FBS + 0.5 M sucrose (re-hydration medium) for 10 min at room temperature, rinsed 2 times in HTF plus 4 mg/ml BSA and then cultured for 24 to 96 h. Survival of embryos was based on their general morphological appearance after thawing and their ability to continue development upon subsequent culture in vitro. Survival of blastocysts after thawing also required expansion or reexpansion of the blastocoel after several hours in culture. Significant differences were found in the survival and development of mouse embryos at different developmental stages quick-frozen in ethylene glycol and sucrose: 2-cell embryos 43/84 (51%), 4 to 8-cell embryos 44/94 (47%), morulae and early blastocysts 56/70 (80%; P相似文献   

20.
The effect of different macromolecules [bovine serum albumin (BSA), Pluronic F-68, (ET surfactant), or sodium hyaluronate (SH)] on postthaw survival of mouse morulae and in vivo- and in vitro-derived bovine blastocysts frozen in 10, 5, or 1% glycerol solutions was investigated. Embryos were equilibrated with cryoprotectant solution at 25 degrees C for 10 min, seeded at -5 degrees C, cooled at 0.5 degrees C/min to -35 degrees C, and plunged into liquid nitrogen. Embryos were thawed in a 35 degrees C water bath, glycerol was removed with 0.6 M sucrose at 25 degrees C for 5 min, and postthaw viability was evaluated after 1, 24, and 48 h in culture. The addition of BSA supplementation improved postthaw survival of mouse morulae frozen in 5% glycerol, but not in 10% glycerol. All three macromolecular supplements were effective in increasing survival of mouse morulae in 5% glycerol but only BSA and SH were effective in increasing postthaw survival of in vivo- and in vitro-derived bovine blastocysts. None of the macromolecular supplements improved postthaw survival of embryos frozen in 1% glycerol.  相似文献   

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