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1.
In embryos derived by nuclear transfer (NT), fusion, or injection of donor cells with recipient oocytes caused mitochondrial heteroplasmy. Previous studies have reported varying patterns of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) transmission in cloned calves. Here, we examined the transmission of mtDNA from NT pigs to their progeny. NT pigs were created by microinjection of Meishan pig fetal fibroblast nuclei into enucleated oocytes (maternal Landrace background). Transmission of donor cell (Meishan) mtDNA was analyzed using 4 NT pigs and 25 of their progeny by PCR-mediated single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis, PCR-RFLP, and a specific PCR to detect Meishan mtDNA single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP-PCR). In the blood and hair root of NT pigs, donor mtDNAs were not detected by PCR-SSCP and PCR-RFLP, but detected by SNP-PCR. These results indicated that donor mtDNAs comprised between 0.1% and 1% of total mtDNA. Only one of the progeny exhibited heteroplasmy with donor cell mtDNA populations, ranging from 0% to 44% in selected tissues. Additionally, other progeny of the same heteroplasmic founder pig were analyzed, and 89% (16/18) harbored donor cell mtDNA populations. The proportion of donor mtDNA was significantly higher in liver (12.9 +/- 8.3%) than in spleen (5.0 +/- 3.9%), ear (6.7 +/- 5.3%), and blood (5.8 +/- 3.7%) (P < 0.01). These results demonstrated that donor mtDNAs in NT pigs could be transmitted to progeny. Moreover, once heteroplasmy was transmitted to progeny of NT-derived pigs, it appears that the introduced mitochondrial populations become fixed and maternally-derived heteroplasmy was more readily maintained in subsequent generations.  相似文献   

2.
In embryos derived by nuclear-transfer (NT), fusion of donor cells with recipient oocytes resulted in varying patterns of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) transmission in NT animals. Distribution of donor cell mtDNA (D-mtDNA) found in offspring of NT-derived founders may also vary from donor cell and host embryo heteroplasmy to host embryo homoplasmy. Here we examined the transmission of mtDNA from NT cows to G(1) offspring. Eleven NT founder cows were produced by fusion of enucleated oocytes (Holstein/Japanese Black) with Jersey/ Holstein oviduct epithelial cells, or Holstein/Japanese Black cumulus cells. Transmission of mtDNA was analyzed by PCR mediated single-strand conformation polymorphism of the D-loop region. In six of seven animals sampled postmortem, heteroplasmy were detected in various tissues, while D-mtDNA could not be detected in blood or hair samples from four live animals. The average proportion of D-mtDNA detected in one NT cow was 7.6%, and those in other cows were <5%. Heteroplasmic NT cows (n = 6) generated a total 12 G(1) offspring. Four of 12 G(1) offspring exhibited high percentages of D-mtDNA populations (range 17-51%). The remaining eight G(1) offspring had slightly or undetectable D-mtDNA (<5%). Generally, a genetic bottleneck in the female germ-line should favor a homoplasmic state. However, proportions of some G(1) offspring maintained heteroplasmy with a much higher percentage of D-mtDNA than their NT dams, which may also reflect a segregation distortion caused by the proposed mitochondrial bottleneck. These results demonstrate that D-mtDNA in NT cows is transmitted to G(1) offspring with varying efficiencies.  相似文献   

3.
Varying degrees of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) heteroplasmy have been observed in nuclear transfer embryos, fetuses, and offspring, but the mechanisms leading to this condition are unknown. We have generated a clone of 12 bovine somatic cell nuclear transfer fetuses, using nuclear donor cells, recipient oocytes, and recipient heifers with defined mtDNA genotypes, to study nuclear-mitochondrial interactions and the origins of mtDNA heteroplasmy. Embryos were reconstructed from granulosa cells with Bos taurus mtDNA type A and recipient oocytes collected from three different maternal lineages with B. taurus mtDNA type B, B. taurus mtDNA type C, or B. indicus mtDNA. Sequence differences in the control region (CR) of B. taurus mtDNAs ranged from 6 to 11 nucleotides and differences between B. taurus and B. indicus CRs from 45 to 50 nucleotides. Fetuses were recovered from recipient heifers with B. taurus mtDNA type B on Day 80 after nuclear transfer (eight B. taurus A/B, two B. taurus A/C, and two B. taurus A/B. indicus). Agarose gel analysis of the CR by polymerase chain reaction-based restriction fragment length polymorphism failed to detect nuclear donor mtDNA in 11 investigated tissues of 10 viable fetuses and in DNA samples of two fetuses in resorption (one B. taurus A/B and one B. taurus A/C). A more sensitive analysis of 1801 plasmid clones with CR inserts derived from tissues of a B. taurus A/B. indicus fetus detected no or very low levels of heteroplasmy (0.5-0.7%). However, the analyses detected considerable amounts ( approximately 2.5% and 5%) of recipient heifer mtDNA in blood samples from two fetuses. Our data do not suggest a replicative advantage of somatic nuclear donor cell mtDNA in bovine transmitochondrial clones produced with oocytes from domestic forms of the same or a different aurochs (B. primigenius) subspecies. Detection of mtDNA from the recipient animal in the circulation of two fetuses points to leakage of the placental barrier, mimicking heteroplasmy.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) composition in one of the largest adult somatic mammalian clones (n = 20) reported so far. The healthy cloned cattle were derived from nuclear transfer of an identical nuclear genetic background (mural granulosa donor cells including surrounding cytoplasm) into enucleated oocytes with either Bos indicus or B. taurus mtDNA. Here we report the first cases of coexisting mtDNAs of two closely related subspecies following nuclear transfer. Heteroplasmy (0.6-2.8%) was found in 4 out of 11 cross-subspecies cloned cattle. Quantitation was performed using "amplification refractory mutation system (ARMS) allele-specific real-time PCR." We determined that the ratio of donor cell to recipient cytoplast mtDNA copy number was 0.9% before nuclear transfer. Therefore, we concluded that the percentage of donor cell mtDNA in the heteroplasmic intersubspecific cloned animals is in accordance with neutral transmission of donor mtDNA. We determined an amino acid sequence divergence of up to 1.3% for the two subspecies-specific mtDNA haplotypes. In addition, intrasubspecific B. indicus heteroplasmy of approximately 1% (but up to 7.3 and 12.7% in muscle and follicular cells of one animal) was detected in 7 out of the 9 B. indicus intrasubspecific cloned cattle.  相似文献   

5.
In the process of nuclear transfer, heteroplasmic sources of mitochondrial DNA from a donor cell and a recipient oocyte are mixed in the cytoplasm of the reconstituted embryo. The distribution of mitochondrial DNA heteroplasmy in nuclear transfer bovine embryos and resultant offspring was investigated by measuring polymorphism in the displacement loop region of mitochondrial DNA using PCR-mediated single-strand conformation polymorphism. Most offspring (20 of 21 calves) from recipient oocytes of undefined mitochondrial DNA genotypes showed different genotypes from the mitochondrial DNA of donor cells. The single calf that was an exception showed heteroplasmy, including the donor mitochondrial DNA genotype. Six cloned calves were produced from oocytes of a defined mitochondrial DNA genotype. All of these clonal members and various tissues showed only the mitochondrial DNA genotype derived from the oocyte. The mitochondrial DNA from donor cells appeared to be eliminated during early embryonic development; it gradually decreased at the early cleavage stages and was hardly detectable by the blastocyst stage. These results indicate that the genotype of mitochondrial DNA from recipient oocytes may become the dominant category of mitochondrial DNA in calves resulting from nuclear transfer.  相似文献   

6.
We examined the effects of the source of recipient oocytes and timing of fusion and activation on the development competence of bovine nuclear transferred (NT) embryos derived from fresh cumulus cells isolated immediately after collection by ovum pickup (OPU). As recipient cytoplasts, we used in vivo-matured oocytes collected from hormone-treated heifers by OPU, or in vitro-matured oocytes from slaughterhouse-derived ovaries. NT embryos were chemically activated immediately (simultaneous fusion and activation, FA) or 2 h (delayed activation, DA) after fusion. When in vitro-matured oocytes were used as recipient cytoplasts, the development rate to the blastocyst stage of NT embryos produced by the DA method (23%) tended to be higher than those by the FA method (15%), but the difference was not significant. NT embryos derived from in vivo-matured cytoplasts have a high blastocyst yield (46%). Pregnancy rate at day 35 did not differ with the timing of fusion and activation (FA vs. DA; 50% vs. 44%) or oocyte source (in vivo- vs. in vitro-matured; 50% vs. 44%). Subsequently, the high fetal losses (88% of pregnancies) were observed with in vitro-matured cytoplasts, whereas no abortions were observed in NT fetuses from in vivo-matured cytoplasts. A total of three embryos derived from fresh cumulus cells developed to term. However, all three cloned calves were stillborn. These results indicate that improvement of development competence after NT is possible by using in vivo-matured oocytes as recipient cytoplasts in bovine NT.  相似文献   

7.
In vitro culture and mtDNA fate of ibex-rabbit nuclear transfer embryos   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Rabbit oocyte can be used as the recipient in interspecies somatic cell nuclear transfer (iSCNT). This work was undertaken in order to study the developmental competence of Capra ibex somatic cells reprogrammed by rabbit oocytes and the fate of mitochondria in iSCNT embryos. Metaphase II (MII) oocytes from superovulated rabbit were used as nuclear recipients. The nuclear donors were Capra ibex somatic cells with different proliferative status: population doubling time (PDL) = 15 +/- 2 (group 1), 35 +/- 2 (group 2), 55 +/- 2 (group 3) and 70 +/- 2 (group 4). Oocytes reconstructed with electrical pulses (2.1kV/cm, 10 micros, 2 times) were activated (1.4kV, 20 micros, 2 times) and then cultured in Medium199 containing 10% fetal bovine serum at 38.5 degrees C, 5% CO2 in air. In groups 1, 2, 3 and 4, the fusion rates were 35.83%, 66.03%, 65.40% and 35.35%, respectively. Similar cleavage rates were observed among the four groups. However, the developmental potential to morula/blastocyst from early nuclear donor embryos (16.42%/10.45%) was significantly higher (p < 0.05) than in terminal donor embryos (9.52%/3.81%). Polymerase chain reaction analysis of the mitochondrial (mt) DNA cytb gene demonstrated that mtDNAs from ibex and rabbit could be detected at various developmental stages before implantation. In conclusion, our results provide some original information about rescuing Capra ibex using the iSCNT technique. These results indicate that: (1) enucleated rabbit oocytes make Capra ibex fibroblast nuclei reprogramme; (2) the proliferative status of donor cells affects the efficiency of iSCNT; and (3) rabbit ooplasm rescues the donor-derived mtDNAs, resulting in mtDNA heteroplasmy before implantation.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanisms controlling the outcome of donor cell-derived mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in cloned animals remain largely unknown. This research was designed to investigate the kinetics of somatic and embryonic mtDNA in reconstructed bovine embryos during preimplantation development, as well as in cloned animals. The experiment involved two different procedures of embryo reconstruction and their evaluation at five distinct phases of embryo development to measure the proportion of donor cell mtDNA (Bos indicus), as well as the segregation of this mtDNA during cleavage. The ratio of donor cell (B. indicus) to host oocyte (B. taurus) mtDNA (heteroplasmy) from blastomere(NT-B) and fibroblast(NT-F) reconstructed embryos was estimated using an allele-specific PCR with fluorochrome-stained specific primers in each sampled blastomere, in whole blastocysts, and in the tissues of a fibroblast-derived newborn clone. NT-B zygotes and blastocysts show similar levels of heteroplasmy (11.0% and 14.0%, respectively), despite a significant decrease at the 9-16 cell stage (5.8%; p<0.05). Heteroplasmy levels in NT-F reconstructed zygotes, however, increased from an initial low level (4.7%), to 12.9% (p<0.05) at the 9-16 cell stage. The NT-F blastocysts contained low levels of heteroplasmy (2.2%) and no somatic-derived mtDNA was detected in the gametes or the tissues of the newborn calf cloned. These results suggest that, in contrast to the mtDNA of blastomeres, that of somatic cells either undergoes replication or escapes degradation during cleavage, although it is degraded later after the blastocyst stage or lost during somatic development, as revealed by the lack of donor cell mtDNA at birth.  相似文献   

9.
We compared developmental potential of somatic cell nuclear transfer (NT) embryos and postnatal survivability of cloned calves produced by two different fusion and activation protocols. As donor cells for NT, bovine cumulus cell-derived cultured cells of passage 5 were used following culture in serum-starved medium for 5-7 days. Enucleated oocytes were fused with donor cells at 21 or 24 hr post maturation. NT embryos fused at 21 hr were activated chemically 3 hr after fusion (DA group) and embryos fused at 24 hr were activated chemically immediately after fusion (FA group). Chemical activation was accomplished by calcium ionophore for 5 min and cytochalasin D + cycloheximide for 1 hr then cycloheximide alone for 4 hr. After in vitro culture in IVD101 medium for 7 days, embryo transfer was performed. Fusion rates were 86 and 84% in the DA and FA groups, respectively. Developmental rate to the blastocyst stage of NT embryos in the DA group was higher than in the FA group (42% vs. 28%). Pregnancy rate did not differ significantly between the DA and FA groups (11/13 and 5/7 at day 35), and 13 cloned calves (including 1 set of twins from a single embryo transfer) were born. High rates of postnatal mortality were observed in both groups. These results suggest that the DA method improves in vitro developmental potential of NT embryos, but the timing of fusion and chemical activation does not affect the pregnancy rate and the survivability of cloned calves.  相似文献   

10.
This study examined the fate of donor mitochondrial DNA during preimplantation development after nuclear transfer (NT) in cattle. Frozen-thawed cumulus cells were used as donor cells in the nuclear transfer. Mitochondrial DNA heteroplasmy in the nuclear transfer embryos was analyzed by allele-specific PCR (AS-PCR), direct DNA sequencing, and DNA chromatography. AS-PCR analysis for the detection of donor mitochondrial DNA was performed at the 1-, 2-, 4-, 8-, 16-cell, morula, and blastocyst stages of the embryos. The mitochondrial DNA from donor cells was detected at all developmental stages of the nuclear transfer embryos. However, mitochondrial DNA heteroplasmy was not observed in direct DNA sequencing of displacement-loop sequence from nuclear-transfer-derived blastocyst embryos. To confirm the mtDNA heteroplasmy in cloned embryos, the AS-PCR product from NT-derived blastocysts was analyzed by DNA sequencing and DNA chromatography. The nucleotides of NT-derived blastocysts were in accordance with the nucleotides from donor cells. These results indicate that the foreign cytoplasmic genome from donor cells was not destroyed by cytoplasmic events during preimplantation development that followed nuclear transfer.  相似文献   

11.
12.
St John JC  Schatten G 《Genetics》2004,167(2):897-905
Offspring produced by nuclear transfer (NT) have identical nuclear DNA (nDNA). However, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) inheritance could vary considerably. In sheep, homoplasmy is maintained since mtDNA is transmitted from the oocyte (recipient) only. In contrast, cattle are heteroplasmic, harboring a predominance of recipient mtDNA along with varying levels of donor mtDNA. We show that the two nonhuman primate Macaca mulatta offspring born by NT have mtDNA from three sources: (1) maternal mtDNA from the recipient egg, (2) maternal mtDNA from the egg contributing to the donor blastomere, and (3) paternal mtDNA from the sperm that fertilized the egg from which the donor blastomere was isolated. The introduction of foreign mtDNA into reconstructed recipient eggs has also been demonstrated in mice through pronuclear injection and in humans through cytoplasmic transfer. The mitochondrial triplasmy following M. mulatta NT reported here forces concerns regarding the parental origins of mtDNA in clinically reconstructed eggs. In addition, mtDNA heteroplasmy might result in the embryonic stem cell lines generated for experimental and therapeutic purposes ("therapeutic cloning").  相似文献   

13.
Development of interspecies cloned embryos in yak and dog   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Interspecies nuclear transfer (NT) could be an alternative to replicate animals when supply of recipient oocytes is limited or in vitro embryo production systems are incomplete. In the present study, embryonic development was assessed following interspecies NT of donor cumulus cells derived from yak and dog into the recipient ooplasm of domestic cow. The percentages of fusion and subsequent embryo development to the eight-cell stage of interspecies NT embryos were comparable to those of intraspecies NT embryos (cow-cow NT embryos). The percentage of development to blastocysts was significantly lower (p < 0.05) in yak-cow NT embryos than that in cow-cow NT embryos (10.9% vs. 39.8%). In dog-cow NT embryos, only one embryo (0.4%) developed to the blastocyst stage. These results indicate that interspecies NT embryos possess equally developmental competence to the eight-cell stage as intraspecies NT embryos, but the development to blastocysts is very low when dog somatic cells are used as the donor nuclei.  相似文献   

14.
The objective of the study was to investigate interspecies somatic cell nuclear transfer (iSCNT) embryonic potential and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) segregation during preimplantation development. We generated bovine-ovine reconstructed embryos via iSCNT using bovine oocytes as recipient cytoplasm and ovine fetal fibroblast as donor cells. Chromosome composition, the total cell number of blastocyst and embryonic morphology were analyzed. In addition, mtDNA copy numbers both from donor cell and recipient cytoplasm were assessed by real-time PCR in individual blastocysts and blastomeres from 1- to 16-cell stage embryos. The results indicated the following: (1) cell nuclei of ovine fetal fibroblasts can dedifferentiate in enucleated bovine ooplasm, and the reconstructed embryos can develop to blastocysts. (2) 66% of iSCNT embryos had the same number of chromosome as that of donor cell, and the total cell number of iSCNT blastocysts was comparable to that of sheep parthenogenetic blastocysts. (3) RT-PCR analysis in individual blastomeres revealed that the ratio of donor cell mtDNA: recipient cytoplasm mtDNA remained constant (1%) from the one- to eight-cell stage. However, the ratio decreased from 0.6% at the 16-cell stage to 0.1% at the blastocyst stage. (4) Both donor cell- and recipient cytoplasm-derived mitochondria distributed unequally in blastomeres with progression of cell mitotic division. Considerable unequal mitochondrial segregation occurred between blastomeres from the same iSCNT embryos.  相似文献   

15.

Background  

The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the cloned sheep "Dolly" and nine other ovine clones produced by somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) was reported to consist only of recipient oocyte mtDNA without any detectable mtDNA contribution from the nucleus donor cell. In cattle, mouse and pig several or most of the clones showed transmission of nuclear donor mtDNA resulting in mitochondrial heteroplasmy. To clarify the discrepant transmission pattern of donor mtDNA in sheep clones we analysed the mtDNA composition of seven fetuses and five lambs cloned from fetal fibroblasts.  相似文献   

16.
One of the several factors that contribute to the low efficiency of mammalian somatic cloning is poor fusion between the small somatic donor cell and the large recipient oocyte. This study was designed to test phytohemagglutinin (PHA) agglutination activity on fusion rate, and subsequent developmental potential of cloned bovine embryos. The toxicity of PHA was established by examining its effects on the development of parthenogenetic bovine oocytes treated with different doses (Experiment 1), and for different durations (Experiment 2). The effective dose and duration of PHA treatment (150 microg/mL, 20 min incubation) was selected and used to compare membrane fusion efficiency and embryo development following somatic cell nuclear transfer (Experiment 3). Cloning with somatic donor fibroblasts versus cumulus cells was also compared, both with and without PHA treatment (150 microg/mL, 20 min). Fusion rate of nuclear donor fibroblasts, after phytohemagglutinin treatment, was increased from 33 to 61% (P < 0.05), and from 59 to 88% (P < 0.05) with cumulus cell nuclear donors. The nuclear transfer (NT) efficiency per oocyte used was improved following PHA treatment, for both fibroblast (13% versus 22%) as well as cumulus cells (17% versus 34%; P < 0.05). The cloned embryos, both with and without PHA treatment, were subjected to vitrification and embryo transfer testing, and resulted in similar survival (approximately 90% hatching) and pregnancy rates (17-25%). Three calves were born following vitrification and embryo transfer of these embryos; two from the PHA-treated group, and one from non-PHA control group. We concluded that PHA treatment significantly improved the fusion efficiency of somatic NT in cattle, and therefore, increased the development of cloned blastocysts. Furthermore, within a determined range of dose and duration, PHA had no detrimental effect on embryo survival post-vitrification, nor on pregnancy or calving rates following embryo transfer.  相似文献   

17.
Reconstructed embryos derived from intersubspecies somatic cell nuclear transfer(SCNT) have poorer developmental potential than those from intrasubspecies SCNT.Based on our previous study that Holstein dairy bovine(HD) mitochondrial DNA(mtDNA) haplotype compatibility between donor karyoplast and recipient cytoplast is crucial for SCNT embryo development,we performed intersubspecies SCNT using HD as donor karyoplast and Luxi yellow heifer(LY) as recipient cytoplast according to mtDNA haplotypes determined...  相似文献   

18.
Summary We studied the chondriomes (the mitochondrial genomes) of sexual-progeny plants derived from eleven Nicotiana cybrids which resulted from donor-recipient protoplast fusions. The recipients were either N. tabacum or N. sylvestris and the donor (of the cytoplasm) was N. bigelovii. The chondriomes were characterized by the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) restriction-patterns. The differences in mtDNA restriction patterns were revealed after Sal I digestions and probing the respective Southern-blots with three mtDNA fragments. The hybridization patterns of mtDNAs from 35 second-generation plants (i.e. the sexual progeny derived from the cybrid plants) indicated only minor variations between plants derived from the same cybrid but pronounced variations among sibs derived from different cybrids. The mtDNA of 32 second-generation plants varied from both original fusion partners but the mtDNA of one (male-sterile) plant was apparently identical with the mtDNA of one of the original donor (N. bigelovii) and the mtDNA of two other (male-fertile) plants was apparently identical to the mtDNA of an original recipient (N. sylvestris). Generally, the mtDNAs of male-fertile, second-generation plants were similar to the mtDNAs of the original recipients while the mtDNAs of the male-sterile second-generation plants were similar to the mtDNA of the donor (N. begelovii). The analyses of mtDNAs from the thirdgeneration plants indicated stabilization of the chondriomes; no variations were detected between the mtDNAs of plants derived from a given second-generation plant.  相似文献   

19.
Procedures to improve somatic cell nuclear transplantation in fish were evaluated. We reported effects of nonirradiated recipient eggs, inactivated recipient eggs, different combinations between recipient eggs and donor cells, duration of serum starvation, generation number, and passage number of donor cells on developmental rates of nuclear transplant (NT) embryos. Exposure to 25,000 R of gamma-rays inactivated recipient eggs. Single nucleus of cultured, synchronized somatic cell from gynogenetic bighead carp (Aristichthys nobilis) was transplanted into nonirradiated or genetically inactivated unfertilized egg of gibel carp (Carassius auratus gibelio). There was no significant difference in developmental rate between nonirradiated and inactivated recipient eggs (27.27% vs. 25.71%, respectively). Chromosome count showed that 70.59% of NT embryos contained 48 chromosomes. It showed that most NT embryos came from donor nuclei of bighead carp, which was supported by microsatellite analysis of NT embryos. But 23.53% of NT embryos contained more than 48 chromosomes. It was presumed that those superfluous chromosomes came from nonirradiated recipient eggs. Besides, 5.88% of NT embryos were chimeras. Eggs of blunt-snout bream (Megalobrama amblycephala) and gibel carp were better recipient eggs than those of loach (Misgurnus anguillicaudatus) (25% and 18.03% vs. 8.43%). Among different duration of serum starvation, developmental rate of NT embryos from somatic nuclei of three-day serum starvation was the highest, reaching 25.71% compared to 14.14% (control), 20% (five-day), and 21.95% (seven-day). Cultured donor cells of less passage facilitated reprogramming of NT embryos than those of more passage. Recloning might improve the developmental rate of NT embryos from the differentiated donor nuclei. Developmental rate of fourth generation was the highest (54.83%) and the lowest for first generation (14.14%) compared to second generation (38.96%) and third generation (53.01%).  相似文献   

20.
Production of calves from G1 fibroblasts.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Since the landmark study of Wilmut et al. describing the birth of a cloned lamb derived from a somatic cell nucleus, there has been debate about the donor nucleus cell cycle stage required for somatic cell nuclear transfer (NT). Wilmut et al. suggested that induction of quiescence by serum starvation was critical in allowing donor somatic cells to support development of cloned embryos. In a subsequent report, Cibelli et al. proposed that G0 was unnecessary and that calves could be produced from actively dividing fibroblasts. Neither study conclusively documented the importance of donor cell cycle stage for development to term. Other laboratories have had success with NT in several species, and most have used a serum starvation treatment. Here we evaluate methods for producing G0 and G1 cell populations and compare development following NT. High confluence was more effective than serum starvation for arresting cells in G0. Pure G1 cell populations could be obtained using a "shake-off" procedure. No differences in in vitro development were observed between cells derived from the high-confluence treatment and from the "shake-off" treatment. However, when embryos from each treatment were transferred to 50 recipients, five calves were obtained from embryos derived from "shake-off" cells, whereas no embryos from confluent cells survived beyond 180 days of gestation. These results indicate that donor cell cycle stage is important for NT, particularly during late fetal development, and that actively dividing G1 cells support higher development rates than cells in G0.  相似文献   

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