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Transuterine embryo migration in recipient cattle
Authors:McMillan W H  Peterson A J
Institution:Reproductive Technologies Group, Dairy and Beef Division, AgResearch Ruakura, Hamilton, New Zealand.
Abstract:Transuterine migration of bovine embryos following fertilization in vivo is apparently rare, but little is known about migration following embryo transfer. We studied heifers receiving either 1 or 2 in vitro produced embryos to determine 1) the incidence of transuterine migration, 2) the timing of migration and 3) the random or systematic occurrence of the event. In 4 experiments, 436 heifers received embryos and 218 of these were pregnant at necroscopy on either Day 14, Day 18, Day 26 or Day 60 of pregnancy. Overall, 43/218 (20%) of the heifers had embryos that had migrated. The frequency of migration was higher in twin (30/68) than in single (13/150) embryo transfers of pregnant recipients (44 vs 9%; P<0.001), and in contralateral (9/15) than in ipsilateral (33/170) transfers (60 vs 19%; P<0.001). Among the heifers that received embryos by ipsilateral transfer, the migration rate was similar to that in heifers pregnant with a singleton after the transfer of either 1 (2/48) or 2 (4/60) embryos (4 vs 7%, NS). The migration rate was highest at Day 26 (12/37) in heifers receiving twin embryos by ipsilateral transfer but was similar at all other stages of pregnancy (15/111, 32 vs 14%; P<0.01). Migration was first observed by Day 14, and it appears that either further migration occurred over the next 12 d or that migration was associated with a higher survival rate from Day 14 to Day 26. The low migration rate evident at Day 60 suggests that migration by Day 26 was associated with increased embryo or fetal death by Day 60. The data suggest that embryo migration is probably independent for each of a pair of surviving embryos. We conclude that in cattle embryo migration is embryo-dependent, but this capability is dormant unless more than 1 embryo is present in a uterine horn or the embryos are transferred to the contralateral uterine horn. The relationship between migration and embryo survival remains unclear.
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