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1.
The advantage of freeze-dried mouse spermatozoa is that samples can be stored in the refrigerator (+4 degrees C). Moreover, the storage of freeze-dried spermatozoa at ambient temperature would permit spermatozoa to be shipped easily and at low cost around the world. To examine the influence of the storage temperature on freeze-dried spermatozoa, we assessed the fertilizing ability of spermatozoa stored at different temperatures. Cauda epididymal spermatozoa were freeze-dried in buffer consisting of 50 mM ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, 50 mM NaCl, and 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0). Samples of freeze-dried spermatozoa were stored at -70, -20, +4, or +24 degrees C for periods of 1 week and 1, 3, and 5 months. Sperm chromosomes were maintained well at -70, -20, and + 4 degrees C for 5 months, and oocytes fertilized with these spermatozoa developed to normal offspring. Moreover, the chromosomal integrity of spermatozoa stored at -20 or + 4 degrees C did not decrease even after 17 months. In contrast, the chromosomes of spermatozoa stored at +24 degrees C were maintained well for 1 month but became considerably degraded after 3 months. In addition, to investigate the cause of deterioration of sperm chromosomes during storage at +24 degrees C, spermatozoa were freeze-dried in buffer containing DNase I. The chromosomes of spermatozoa freeze-dried with 1 or 0.2 units/ml of DNase I, 100% or 72%, respectively, exhibited chromosomal abnormalities. Our findings suggest that freeze-dried spermatozoa can be stored long-term with stability at +4 degrees C, and the suppression of nucleases present in the buffer or spermatozoa during storage led to the achievement of long-term storage of freeze-dried spermatozoa.  相似文献   

2.
Kaneko T  Serikawa T 《Cryobiology》2012,64(3):211-214
Many genetically engineered mice strains have been generated worldwide and sperm preservation is a valuable method for storing these strains as genetic resources. Freeze-drying is a useful sperm preservation method because it requires neither liquid nitrogen nor dry ice for preservation and transportation. We report here successful long-term preservation at 4 °C of mouse spermatozoa freeze-dried using a simple buffer solution (10mM Tris, 1mM EDTA, pH 8.0). Offspring with fertility were obtained from oocytes fertilized with freeze-dried spermatozoa from C57BL/6 and B6D2F1 mouse strains stored at 4 °C for 3 years. This freeze-drying method is a safe and economical tool for the biobanking of valuable mouse strains.  相似文献   

3.
Sperm preservation is a useful technique for the maintenance of biological resources in experimental and domestic animals, and in wild animals. A new preservation method has been developed that enables sperm to be stored for a long time in a refrigerator at 4°C. Sperm are freeze-dried in a solution containing 10 mM Tris and 1 mM EDTA. Using this method, liquid nitrogen is not required for the storage and transportation of sperm. We demonstrate that chimpanzee, giraffe, jaguar, weasel and the long-haired rat sperm remain viable after freeze-drying. In all species, pronuclei were formed after the injection of freeze-dried sperm into the mouse oocytes. Although preliminary, these results may be useful for the future establishment of “freeze-drying zoo” to conserve wild animals.  相似文献   

4.
The widespread production of mice with transgenes, disrupted genes and mutant genes, has strained the resources available for maintaining these mouse lines as live populations, and dependable methods for gamete and embryo preservation in these lines are needed. Here we report the results of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) with spermatozoa freeze-dried or frozen without a cryoprotectant after storage for periods up to 1.5 years. Freeze-dried samples were stored at 4 degrees C. Samples frozen without cryoprotection were maintained at -196 degrees C. After storage, spermatozoa were injected into the oocytes by ICSI. Zygotic chromosomes and fetal development at Day 15 of gestation were examined after 0, 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 mo of sperm storage. When fresh spermatozoa were used for ICSI, 96% of resultant zygotes contained normal chromosomes, and 58% of two-cell embryos transferred developed to normal viable fetuses. Similar results were obtained when spermatozoa were frozen without cryoprotection and then used for ICSI (87% and 45%, respectively; P > 0.05) and after 12 mo of sperm storage (mean of six endpoints examined: 87% and 52%, respectively; P > 0.05). Freeze-drying decreased the proportion of zygotes with normal karyoplates (75% vs. 96%; P < 0.001) and the proportion of embryos that developed into fetuses (35% vs. 58%; P < 0.001), but similar to freezing, there was no further deterioration during 12 mo of storage (mean of six endpoints examined: 68% and 34%, respectively; P > 0.05). Live offspring were obtained from both freeze-dried and frozen spermatozoa after storage for 1.5 yr. The results indicate that 1) the freeze-drying procedure itself causes some abnormalities in spermatozoa but freezing without cryoprotection does not and 2) long-term storage of both frozen and freeze-dried spermatozoa is not deleterious to their genetic integrity. Freezing without cryoprotection is highly successful, simple, and efficient but, like all routine sperm storage methods, requires liquid nitrogen. Liquid nitrogen is also required for freeze-drying, but sperm can then be stored at 4 degrees C and shipped at ambient temperatures. Both preservation methods are successful, but rapid freezing without cryoprotection is the preferred method for preservation of spermatozoa from mouse strains carrying unique genes and mutations.  相似文献   

5.
Kaneko T  Serikawa T 《PloS one》2012,7(4):e35043

Background

Freeze-drying sperm has been developed as a new preservation method where liquid nitrogen is no longer necessary. An advantage of freeze-drying sperm is that it can be stored at 4°C and transported at room temperature. Although the successful freeze-drying of sperm has been reported in a number of animals, the possibility of long-term preservation using this method has not yet been studied.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Offspring were obtained from oocytes fertilized with rat epididymal sperm freeze-dried using a solution containing 10 mM Tris and 1 mM EDTA adjusted to pH 8.0. Tolerance of testicular sperm to freeze-drying was increased by pre-treatment with diamide. Offspring with normal fertility were obtained from oocytes fertilized with freeze-dried epididymal sperm stored at 4°C for 5 years.

Conclusions and Significance

Sperm with –SS– cross-linking in the thiol-disulfide of their protamine were highly tolerant to freeze-drying, and the fertility of freeze-dried sperm was maintained for 5 years without deterioration. This is the first report to demonstrate the successful freeze-drying of sperm using a new and simple method for long-term preservation.  相似文献   

6.
The nuclei of freeze-dried mouse spermatozoa are able to retain their chromosome integrity and developmental potential. To optimize the conditions of freeze-drying, we examined whether pH values of the freeze-drying solution affect the chromosome integrity and developmental potential of sperm nuclei. The sperm freeze-drying solution we used contained a high concentration (50 mM) of calcium-chelating EGTA. Sperm chromosomes were examined at the metaphase of the first mitosis after injection of freeze-dried spermatozoa into matured oocytes. The developmental potential of sperm nuclei was assessed by examining the development of fetuses in midgestation. The results showed that both sperm chromosomes and sperm developmental potential are maintained better when the freeze-drying solution was slightly alkaline (pH 8.0) rather than near neutral or acidic (pH 7.4-6.0). The data indicated that the chromosome integrity and developmental ability of mouse spermatozoa are affected by the pH value of freeze-drying solution.  相似文献   

7.
Potential methods for cryopreservation of mouse spermatozoa are freeze-drying, desiccation, and suspension in EGTA Tris-HCl buffered solution (ETBS: 50 mM NaCl, 50 mM EGTA, and 10 mM Tris-HCl). To determine the duration that mouse spermatozoa suspended in ETBS-based solutions could retain their normal characteristics without freezing, spermatozoa collected from the cauda epididymis were suspended in ETBS or in ETBS supplemented with the antioxidants, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), or DL-alpha-tocopherol acetate (Vitamin E acetate; VEA) diluted in DMSO, then held at ambient temperature (22-24 degrees C) for up to 9 days. When oocytes were injected with spermatozoa preserved in ETBS alone, activation rates of oocytes and chromosome integrity at the first cleavage metaphase decreased at 1 day (P < 0.001) and 2-4 days (P < 0.01) following treatment. When oocytes were injected with spermatozoa preserved in ETBS supplemented with DMSO or VEA/DMSO, chromosome integrity did not decrease significantly (through 9 days of preservation). Although DMSO maintained sperm chromosome integrity more effectively than VEA/DMSO up to 2-4 days (91 and 67%, normal karyotypes in DMSO and VEA/DMSO, respectively), VEA/DMSO helped to maintain the ability of spermatozoa to activate oocytes, but did not enhance the maintenance of sperm chromosome integrity. These results suggested that deterioration of spermatozoa preserved in ETBS alone was delayed by supplementation with antioxidants.  相似文献   

8.
This study was designed to examine whether rat spermatozoa after freeze-drying and 1-year storage can participate in full-term development following intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Cauda epididymal spermatozoa from Crlj:Wistar rats were frozen in liquid nitrogen (LN(2)), first dried for 14 hr at 0.37 hPa and then for 3 hr at 0.001 hPa. The dried spermatozoa were stored for 1 year in a desiccator at +25 degrees C, or in a refrigerator at +4 degrees C, or in LN(2) at -196 degrees C. Controls consisted of sperm that had only been frozen and stored in LN(2). After being stored, spermatozoa were sonicated to dissociate the sperm tail and were injected into oocytes from superovulated Slc:SD rats. The respective fertilization rates of oocytes injected with frozen sperm, or with freeze-dried sperm stored at +25, +4, and -196 degrees C were 79%, 75%, 70%, and 73%. However, the corresponding cleavage rates of injected oocytes were 63%, 1%, 38%, and 36%. After transfer of >80 zygotes of each group into recipients, the respective percentages of full-term normal offspring resulting from frozen sperm or from freeze-dried sperm stored at +25, +4, and -196 degrees C were 36%, 0%, 7%, and 14%. These results demonstrate that the storage temperature significantly influenced the likelihood of term development of rats produced by injection of oocytes with freeze-dried spermatozoa. Chromosomal analysis of the rat spermatozoa in the ICSI oocytes indicated that chromosomal aberration in freeze-dried spermatozoa stored at +25 degrees C (100%) occurred more frequently than in frozen control spermatozoa (41%) and freeze-dried spermatozoa stored at -196 degrees C (35%), and the frequency of chromosomal aberrations in freeze-dried spermatozoa stored at +4 degrees C (65%) was the intermediate. In conclusion, rat spermatozoa freeze-dried and stored at +4 degrees C for 1 year are capable of participating in full-term development after ICSI.  相似文献   

9.
Kaneko T  Kimura S  Nakagata N 《Theriogenology》2007,68(7):1017-1021
Sperm preservation is a valuable technique for maintaining genetic resources in biomedical research. In the present study, 10mM Tris-HCl and 1mM EDTA (TE buffer; a simple solution without cryoprotection), was used to freeze or freeze-dry rat sperm. The results were compared with rat sperm frozen using a solution containing Equex STM and egg yolk. Sperm from Wistar and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were evaluated by injecting them individually into oocytes derived from the same strain. Of the oocytes that survived after sperm injection, more than 94% were fertilized in all treatments of both strains. In the Wistar rat, 27, 20, 43, and 30% of 2-cell embryos developed to blastocysts, and 35, 9, 11, and 14% of 2-cell embryos developed to offspring from oocytes injected with fresh, frozen (Equex STM/egg yolk), frozen (TE buffer), and freeze-dried sperm, respectively. Using the analagous sources of sperm in the SD rat, 45, 14, 27, and 7% of 2-cell embryos developed to blastocysts, and 22, 0, 14, and 4% of 2-cell embryos developed to offspring. These results demonstrated that rat sperm could be frozen or freeze-dried using TE buffer. We concluded that this simple preservation method, in which cryoprotection was not required, allowed sperm to be preserved efficiently with maintenance of their fertilizing ability.  相似文献   

10.
Successful offspring production after intracytoplasmic injection of freeze-dried sperm has been reported in laboratory animals but not in domesticated livestock, including pigs. The integrity of the DNA in the freeze-dried sperm is reported to affect embryogenesis. Release of endonucleases from the sperm is one of the causes of induction of sperm DNA fragmentation. We examined the effects of chelating agents, which inhibit the activation of such enzymes, on DNA fragmentation in freeze-dried sperm and on the in vitro and in vivo developmental ability of porcine oocytes following boar sperm head injection. Boar ejaculated sperm were sonicated, suspended in buffer supplemented with (1) 50 mM EGTA, (2) 50 mM EDTA, (3) 10 mM EDTA, or (4) no chelating agent and freeze-dried. A fertilization medium (Pig-FM) was used as a control. The rehydrated spermatozoa in each group were then incubated in Pig-FM at room temperature. The rate of DNA fragmentation in the control group, as assessed by the TUNEL method, increased gradually as time after rehydration elapsed (2.8% at 0 min to 12.2% at 180 min). However, the rates in all experimental groups (1-4) did not increase, even at 180 min (0.7-4.1%), which were all significantly lower (p < 0.05) than that of the control group. The rate of blastocyst formation after the injection in the control group (6.0%) was significantly lower (p < 0.05) than those in the 50 mM EGTA (23.1%) and 10 mM EDTA (22.6%) groups incubated for 120-180 min. The average number of blastocyst cells in the 50 mM EGTA group (33.1 cells) was significantly higher (p < 0.05) than that in the 10 mM EDTA group (17.8 cells). Finally, we transferred oocytes from 50 mM EGTA or control groups incubated for 0-60 min into estrous-synchronized recipients. The two recipients of the control oocytes became pregnant and one miscarried two fetuses on day 39. The results suggested that fragmentation of DNA in freeze-dried boar sperm is one of the causes of decreased in vitro developmental ability of injected oocytes to the blastocyst stage. Supplementation with EGTA in a freeze-drying buffer improves this ability.  相似文献   

11.
The objective was to investigate the ability of freeze-dried (FD) bull spermatozoa to induce calcium oscillations in mouse oocytes and meiosis resumption in in vitro-matured bovine oocytes after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Bull spermatozoa were freeze-dried and stored for 1 y at +25, +4, or -196 degrees C. In the first experiment, rehydrated sperm heads were microinseminated into hybrid mouse oocytes loaded with fluo-3/AM, and the kinetics of intracellular calcium concentration was monitored for 1h. Repetitive increases of intracellular calcium concentration were recorded in the majority of injected oocytes, with exception of a few oocytes injected with FD sperm heads stored at +4 degrees C (11%) and +25 degrees C (8%) that exhibited a single increase or no response (non-oscillated). The proportion of oocytes that oscillated with high frequency (>or=10 spikes/h) was higher in the non-dried control group (79%; P<0.05) than in the FD groups (58, 55, and 54% for storage at -196, +4, and +25 degrees C, respectively). In the second experiment, control and FD spermatozoa were microinseminated into in vitro-matured, denuded bovine oocytes. The oocytes were fixed and stained 12h after ICSI. A higher proportion of bovine oocytes injected with control spermatozoa (70%; P<0.05) resumed meiosis than those injected with +25, +4 and -196 degrees C stored FD spermatozoa (53, 48, and 57%, respectively). The proportion of ICSI oocytes that developed to the pronuclear stage (complete activation) was higher in the control group (64%; P<0.05) than those in all the FD groups (34, 27, and 28% for storage at -196, +4, and +25 degrees C, respectively). Thus, the ability of bull spermatozoa to induce frequent intracellular calcium spikes in mouse oocytes was impaired by the process of freeze-drying, without differences among storage at +25, +4 or -196 degrees C, probably resulting in a lower proportion of bovine oocytes that resumed meiosis and/or developed to the pronuclear stage.  相似文献   

12.
This study demonstrated that freeze-dried mouse spermatozoa possess strong resistance to 137Cs gamma-ray irradiation at doses of up to 8 Gy. Freeze-dried mouse spermatozoa were rehydrated and injected into mouse oocytes with an intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) technique. Most oocytes can be activated after ICSI by using spermatozoa irradiated with gamma-rays before and after freeze-drying. Sperm chromosome complements were analyzed at the first cleavage metaphase. Chromosome aberrations increased in a dose-dependent manner in the spermatozoa irradiated before freeze-drying. However, no increase in oocytes with chromosome aberrations was observed when fertilized by spermatozoa that had been irradiated after freeze-drying, as compared with freeze-dried spermatozoa that had not been irradiated. These results suggest that both the chromosomal integrity of freeze-dried spermatozoa, as well as their ability to activate oocytes, were protected from gamma-ray irradiation at doses at which chromosomal damage is found to be strongly induced in spermatozoa suspended in solution.  相似文献   

13.
The fertilization of pig oocytes following intracytoplasmic injection of freeze-dried spermatozoa was evaluated. Activation and male pronuclear (MPN) formation were better in oocytes injected with isolated freeze-dried sperm heads than whole freeze-dried spermatozoa, but cleaved embryos were generally difficult to develop to the morula or blastocyst stage. When spermatozoa were freeze-dried for 24 h, oocyte activation and MPN formation in activated oocytes after sperm head injection were inhibited. Embryo development to the blastocyst stage was only obtained after injecting sperm heads isolated from spermatozoa freeze-dried for 4 h and stored at 4 degrees C. The proportion of embryos that developed to the blastocyst stage was not increased by the treatment of injected oocytes with Ca ionophore (5-10 microM). Increasing the sperm storage time did not affect oocyte activation or MPN formation, but blastocyst development was observed only after 1 mo of storage. These results demonstrate that pig oocytes can be fertilized with appropriately freeze-dried spermatozoa and that the fertilized oocytes can develop to the blastocyst stage.  相似文献   

14.
The vitelline envelope (VE) and fertilization envelope (FE) in eggs of the fish Cyprinus carpio and Plecoglossus altivelis were purified by homogenization of eggs or embryos in 5 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.0, containing 2 mM ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid disodium salt (EDTA), except for processing of VEs in Plecoglossus eggs, and by repeated washing wih the same buffer. To extract the outermost layer material, the purified VEs and FEs were processed overnight at 4 degrees C in 5 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.0, containing 8 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 2 mM EDTA, 0.3 M alpha-lactose, 0.3 M glucose, and 0.9% NaCl. Since extraction of the outermost layer of the VEs of Cyprinus eggs in this solution was found to be ultrastructurally incomplete, further sonication in the same buffer was necessary. The solution extracted from purified VEs or FEs was dialyzed against 5 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.0, followed by lyophilization. The extracts from the FEs from both fish species contained two kinds of lectins, one agglutinated human B-type erythrocytes and the other nonspecifically agglutinated fish spermatozoa, and both extracts had a strong bactericidal effect on Vibrio anguillarum that was isolated from diseased cultured fish, but not on Aeromonas hydrophila and Escherichia coli. The extracts of purified VEs from eggs of both fish had no bactericidal effect on the bacteria examined, nor any agglutination effect on human erythrocytes and fish spermatozoa.  相似文献   

15.
The objective of this study was to investigate the preservation of spermatozoa in a simple medium without freezing and to examine the effects of the preserved sperm on fertilization and development after injection into mature mouse oocytes. Mouse spermatozoa were collected from two caudae epididymides of mature B6D2F1 males and stored under various conditions: 1) in KSOMaa medium (potassium simplex optimized medium with amino acids) supplemented with 0, 1, or 4 mg/ml BSA and held at room temperature (RT, 27 degrees C); 2) in KSOMaa medium containing 4 mg/ml BSA (KSOM-BSA) and held at 4 degrees C, RT, or 37 degrees C (CO2 incubator); 3) in KSOM-BSA with osmolarity ranging from 271 to 2000 mOsmol, adjusted by addition of NaCl and held at 4 degrees C; and 4) a two-step preservation system consisting of storage in 800 mOsmol KSOM-BSA for 1 wk at RT followed by storage at -20 degrees C. Preservation of mouse spermatozoa at 4 degrees C in a medium with high osmolarity (700-1000 mOsmol) resulted in the highest frequency of live births after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) into mature oocytes. The optimal conditions for preservation of mouse spermatozoa were 800 mOsmol KSOM containing 4 mg/ml BSA and a holding temperature of 4 degrees C. More than 40% of oocytes injected with sperm heads stored under these conditions for 2 mo developed to the morula/blastocyst stage in vitro and 39% of the embryos developed to term after transfer to recipient mice. Our results also indicate that mouse spermatozoa can be stored in 800 mOsmol KSOM-BSA medium at RT for 1 wk and then at -20 degrees C for up to 3 mo and retain their competence for ICSI. These new preservation methods permit extended conservation of viable spermatozoa that are capable of supporting normal embryonic development and the live birth of healthy offspring after ICSI.  相似文献   

16.
Freeze-dried mouse spermatozoa are capable of participating in normal embryonic development after injection into oocytes. When the freeze-dried spermatozoa are used as a method for storage of genetic materials, however, it is essential to assure the relevance of long-term preservation over several decades or centuries. Thus, we applied the theory of accelerated degradation kinetics to freeze-dried mouse spermatozoa. Thermal denaturation kinetics were determined based on Arrhenius plots derived from transition-state theory analysis at three elevated temperatures: 30, 40, and 50 degrees C. Accelerated degradation kinetics were calculated by extrapolation of Arrhenius plots. This theory also is being applied to the long-term stability of drugs. The estimated rate of development to the blastocyst stage at 3 and 6 mo and at 1, 10, and 100 yr of sperm storage at 4 degrees C were 21.60%, 7.91%, 1.00%, 0%, and 0%, respectively. At -80 degrees C, estimated development rates to the blastocyst stage that would be expected after 100 yr of storage did not decline significantly. In addition, after 3 or 6 mo of storage at 4 or -80 degrees C, preimplantation development of the embryos derived from intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) was examined. The actual developmental rates to the blastocyst stage from ICSI by freeze-dried sperm stored for 3 mo at 4 and -80 degrees C were 21% and 62%, respectively, and the rates for such sperm stored for 6 mo were 13% and 59%, respectively. These results indicate that the determination of accelerated degradation kinetics can be applied to the preservation of freeze-dried mouse spermatozoa. Furthermore, for long-term preservation, freeze-dried mouse spermatozoa appear to require being kept at lower than -80 degrees C.  相似文献   

17.
Rat sperm freeze-dried in a solution containing Tris and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) (TE buffer) can be preserved at 4 °C, and oocytes injected with these sperm developed into offspring though developmental ability was low. We studied the culture conditions to improve the developmental ability of oocytes injected with freeze-dried sperm. After being injected with fresh sperm, the zygotes were cultured in modified Krebs–Ringer bicarbonate (mKRB), modified rat 1-cell embryo culture medium (mR1ECM)/BSA, and mR1ECM with different osmolality, before being cultured in mR1ECM. High proportion of zygotes cultured in mKRB (270 mOsm) before being cultured in mR1ECM developed into blastocysts compared to zygotes cultured only with mR1ECM (50% vs. 28%, P < 0.05). Culturing in mKRB also led to a high proportion of zygotes developing into blastocysts after the injection of freeze-dried sperm than zygotes cultured only with mR1ECM (32% vs. 15%, P < 0.05). Offspring (16%) were obtained when 19 2-cell embryos derived from oocytes that had been injected with freeze-dried sperm preserved at 4 °C for 1 year were transferred. This study demonstrated that the culture conditions soon after the injection of sperm markedly influenced the subsequent development of embryos. Also, rat sperm after freeze-drying in TE buffer were preserved at 4 °C for long term without their deterioration.  相似文献   

18.
Freeze-dried sperm fertilization leads to full-term development in rabbits   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
To date, the laboratory mouse is the only mammal in which freeze-dried spermatozoa have been shown to support full-term development after microinjection into oocytes. Because spermatozoa in mice, unlike in most other mammals, do not contribute centrosomes to zygotes, it is still unknown whether freeze-dried spermatozoa in other mammals are fertile. Rabbit sperm was selected as a model because of its similarity to human sperm (considering the centrosome inheritance pattern). Freeze- drying induces rabbit spermatozoa to undergo dramatic changes, such as immobilization, membrane breaking, and tail fragmentation. Even when considered to be "dead" in the conventional sense, rabbit spermatozoa freeze-dried and stored at ambient temperature for more than 2 yr still have capability comparable to that of fresh spermatozoa to support preimplantation development after injection into oocytes followed by activation. A rabbit kit derived from a freeze-dried spermatozoon was born after transferring 230 sperm-injected oocytes into eight recipients. The results suggest that freeze-drying could be applied to preserve the spermatozoa from most other species, including human. The present study also raises the question of whether rabbit sperm centrosomes survive freeze-drying or are not essential for embryonic development.  相似文献   

19.
Mammalian freeze-dried sperm can maintain their genetic integrity and event support full development to term when microinjected into mature oocytes. However, it is unknown whether freeze-dried sperm can still maintain their calcium oscillation-inducing capability. Here, we microinjected mouse and bovine freeze-dried sperm into mouse MII oocytes and examined their calcium oscillation-inducing ability following intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Two pieces of information are revealed. First, nearly all oocytes injected with a freeze-dried mouse sperm head or a bovine sperm showed fertilization-like calcium oscillations, indicating that freeze-drying treatment does not affect the activity of the sperm factor responsible for calcium oscillations. Second, freeze-dried sperm exhibited high resistance to external temperature increase. This is shown by the finding that the freeze-dried sperm can maintain their calcium oscillation-inducing capacity even following exposure to 100 degrees C for 3 h. We therefore conclude that mammalian sperm can maintain their calcium oscillation-inducing capability following freeze-drying, rehydration, and ICSI treatments.  相似文献   

20.
昆明小鼠精子冷冻的研究(简报)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
胚胎工程技术是动物品种、品系培育,种质资源保存及转基因动物制备、保种的重要手段。配子的冷冻保存技术目前广泛应用于胚胎工程。和胚胎冷冻相比小鼠精子冷冻技术方便、高效尤其适用于转基因及突变系小鼠的保种。成功的精子冷冻要求复苏后通过体外受精(IVF)获得胚胎,再移植入受  相似文献   

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