Sperm status and DNA dose play key roles in sperm/ICSI‐mediated gene transfer in caprine |
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Authors: | Farshad Shadanloo Mohammad Hasan Najafi Sayed Morteza Hosseini Mehdi Hajian Mohsen Forouzanfar Kamran Ghaedi Parvaneh Abedi Somaye Ostadhosseini Laleh Hosseini Morad‐Pasha Eskandari‐Nasab Mohammad Hossein Nasr Esfahani |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Reproduction and Development, Royan Institute for Animal Biotechnology, ACECR, Isfahan, Iran;2. Faculty of Agriculture, University of Zanjan, Zanjan, Iran;3. Isfahan Fertility and Infertility Center, Isfahan, Iran;4. Department of Basic Science, Islamic Azad University, Marvdasht Branch, Marvdasht, Iran;5. Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Royan Institute for Animal Biotechnology, ACECR, Isfahan, Iran;6. Biology Department, School of Science, University of Isfahan, Isfahan, Iran |
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Abstract: | In relation to the growing recent interest in the establishment of sperm‐mediated gene transfer (SMGT) technology as a convenient and effective method for the simple production of transgenic animals, in this study the possibility of using SMGT to produce transgenic caprine embryos was investigated for the first time. Buck sperm were directly incubated with different concentrations (0–500 ng) of pcDNA/his/Lac‐Z plasmid and used for IVF or ICSI. Sperm used for ICSI were categorized into motile or live‐immotile group before being injected into oocytes. In a separate experiment, dead sperm prepared by repeated freezing/thawing were used for DNA‐incubation before ICSI. Sham injection was carried out by intracytoplasmic injection of approximately the same volume of media containing different doses of DNA using an ICSI needle. Transgene expression and transmission were detected by X‐Gal staining and PCR analysis of developed embryos, respectively. A reasonable blastocyst rate was observed in all the groups. Only embryos in the sham group were negative for transgene transmission. Transgene expression was completely dependent on the delivery technique and status of sperm, and was only observed in the live‐immotile and dead ICSI groups. The results of this study showed that the technique (IVF vs. ICSI vs. sham injection), sperm status (motile vs. live‐immotile vs. dead) and to some extent DNA concentration affect embryo development, transgene transmission and expression. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 77:868–875, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. |
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Keywords: | SMGT goat transgenesis sperm status |
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