| Literature DB >> 15251240 |
Hiroki Hirayama1, Soichi Kageyama, Satoru Moriyasu, Ken Sawai, Sadao Onoe, Yoshiyuki Takahashi, Seiji Katagiri, Keiko Toen, Keiko Watanabe, Tsugunori Notomi, Hidenari Yamashina, Sigenori Matsuzaki, Akira Minamihashi.
Abstract
Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is a novel DNA amplification method that amplifies a target sequence specifically under isothermal conditions. The product of LAMP is detected by the turbidity of the reaction mixture without electrophoresis. The objective of this study was to develop a rapid sexing method for bovine preimplantation embryos using LAMP. The first experiment was conducted to optimize the DNA extraction method for LAMP-based embryo sexing. The DNA of single blastomeres was extracted using three methods: heat, NaOH, and proteinase K-Tween 20 (PK-TW) treatments. Sexing was performed with two LAMP reactions, male-specific and male-female common reaction, after DNA extraction. The rates of correct determination of sex were 88.9-94.4%, with no difference among methods. The sensitivity and accuracy of LAMP-based embryo sexing were evaluated in the next experiment. The proportion of samples in which the sex was correctly determined was 75-100% for one to five biopsied cells. Lastly, in vivo-derived embryos were examined to verify the usefulness of LAMP-based embryo sexing, and some of these fresh, sexed embryos were transferred into recipient animals. The time needed for sexing was <1 h. The pregnancy rate was 57.4% and all calves born were of the predicted sex (12 male and 21 female). Therefore, LAMP-based embryo sexing accurately determined gender and is suitable for field application.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15251240 DOI: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2003.12.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theriogenology ISSN: 0093-691X Impact factor: 2.740