Publication | Open Access
Rhesus Monkeys Produced by Nuclear Transfer1
237
Citations
23
References
1997
Year
BiologyOocyteInfertilityPhysiological ParametersDevelopmental BiologyFertilityNuclear Transfer1GeneticsIdentical Nonhuman PrimatesGenetic EngineeringNuclear TransferPrimate BehaviorReproductive BiologyPublic HealthMedicineCloningHuman Reproduction
Genetically identical nonhuman primates can provide a powerful animal model for gene therapy and research activities where the physiological parameters directly or indirectly under study are heritable. Here we demonstrate that nuclear transfer is a viable technology for the production of identical rhesus macaques. Oocytes recovered from gonadotropin-treated females were enucleated by aspiration of the first polar body and underlying ooplasm, then activated by cycloheximide exposure. Individual diploid blastomeres, recovered from in vitro-fertilization-produced embryos (either fresh or frozen-thawed) and used as nuclear donors, were injected under the zona pellucida of enucleated (chromosome-free) oocytes and fused by electric pulses. The reconstituted embryos were cocultured on buffalo rat liver cells before cryostorage and transfer to synchronized host mothers. Of the 9 females receiving a total of 29 reconstituted embryos, 3 became pregnant, with two live births resulting, one male and one female. The parentage of both infants was established unequivocally by genotype analysis at 7 highly variable short tandem repeat loci.
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