Publication | Open Access
Birth of Piglets Derived from Porcine Zygotes Cultured in a Chemically Defined Medium1
643
Citations
38
References
2002
Year
OocyteFertilityReproductive BiologyEmbryologyEmbryo CulturePublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyNovel Culture MediumPorcine Zygotes CulturedPorcine ZygotesChemically Defined Medium1MorphogenesisPorcine DiseaseEmbryonic DevelopmentPorcine Zygote MediumBiologyAnimal ReproductionDevelopmental BiologyAnimal SciencePhysiologyIn Vitro TechniquesMedicine
The study evaluated whether porcine zygotes cultured in a novel chemically defined medium (PZM) could develop in vitro and reach full term, comparing outcomes to in vivo development. Single‑cell zygotes collected Day 2 after hCG were cultured in PZM‑3 (3 mg ml⁻¹ BSA) under 5 % CO₂:5 % O₂:90 % N₂, and resulting embryos were transferred to recipients to assess viability. PZM‑3 yielded higher blastocyst rates, hatching, and cell counts than NCSU‑23, and embryos transferred from PZM‑4 or in vivo produced comparable farrowing rates and piglet numbers, demonstrating that chemically defined medium supports full‑term development.
We evaluated the in vitro development of porcine zygotes that were cultured in a novel culture medium, porcine zygote medium (PZM), under different conditions and compared to in vivo development. The viability of these zygotes to full term after culture was also evaluated by embryo transfer to recipients. Porcine single-cell zygotes were collected from gilts on Day 2 after hCG injection. Culture of zygotes in PZM containing 3 mg/ml of BSA (PZM-3) produced better results in terms of proportion of Day 6 blastocysts, Day 8 hatching rate, and numbers of inner cell mass (ICM) cells and total cells in Day 8 embryos than that in North Carolina State University (NCSU)-23 medium. In culture with PZM-3, embryo development was optimized in an atmosphere of 5% CO2:5% O2:90% N2 compared to 5% CO2 in air. The ICM and total cell numbers in Day 6 embryos cultured in PZM-3 or in PZM-3 in which BSA was replaced with 3 mg/ml of polyvinyl alcohol (PZM-4) were also greater than those of NCSU-23 but less than those developed in vivo. However, no difference was found in the ratio of ICM to total cells among embryos developed in PZM-3, PZM-4, or in vivo. When the Day 6 embryos that developed in PZM-4 (99 embryos) or in vivo (100 embryos) were each transferred into six recipients, no difference was found in the farrowing rate (83.3% for both treatments) and in the number of piglets born (33 and 42 piglets, respectively). Our results indicate that porcine zygotes can develop into blastocysts in a chemically defined medium and to full term by transfer to recipients after culture.
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