Literature DB >> 15979134

Production of a cloned calf using zona-free serial nuclear transfer.

Vanessa J Hall1, Nancy T Ruddock, Melissa A Cooney, Natasha A Korfiatis, R Tayfur Tecirlioglu, Shara Downie, Mark Williamson, Andrew J French.   

Abstract

The efficiency of generating cloned animals following somatic cell nuclear transfer appears to have reached a plateau, despite ongoing research to improve developmental outcomes. A major limitation appears in the restricted nature of the adult/donor cell to de-differentiate to form a totipotent nucleus. Serial nuclear transfer, a modified cloning technique, has increased the developmental competence of amphibian, murine and porcine cloned embryos. This procedure involves a second nuclear transfer step; pronuclear-like cloned nuclei are transferred into pronuclear stage zygotic cytoplasts. The present study reports on the development of a serial nuclear transfer technique in the bovine, based on a zona-free method (hand-made cloning), resulting in the birth of a cloned calf. Comparisons were made between embryos produced by hand-made cloning and serial nuclear transfer. There were no differences between in vitro development or differential cell counts in the blastocysts produced. Transfer of 16 serial hand-made cloned blastocysts resulted in the production of one healthy calf (6%), whereas hand-made cloning resulted in the birth of 1 calf from 23 transferred blastocysts (4%). One serial nuclear transfer pre-term fetus had renal and hepatic abnormalities (previously observed in clones from this cell line). Although it may not be as beneficial in the bovine as in other species, normal placentation (size, placentomes and umbilicus) was encouraging. Refinement of this technique may help to identify species-specific differences in zygotic competence that affect reprogramming of donor cell nuclei and that may improve efficiency.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15979134     DOI: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2005.05.042

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theriogenology        ISSN: 0093-691X            Impact factor:   2.740


  3 in total

1.  High developmental potential in vitro and in vivo of cattle embryos cloned without micromanipulators.

Authors:  Lleretny Rodríguez; Felipe I Navarrete; Heribelt Tovar; José F Cox; Fidel Ovidio Castro
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2008-01-18       Impact factor: 3.412

Review 2.  Interspecies somatic cell nuclear transfer and preliminary data for horse-cow/mouse iSCNT.

Authors:  R Tayfur Tecirlioglu; Jitong Guo; Alan O Trounson
Journal:  Stem Cell Rev       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 5.739

Review 3.  Handmade cloning: recent advances, potential and pitfalls.

Authors:  Geetika Verma; J S Arora; R S Sethi; C S Mukhopadhyay; Ramneek Verma
Journal:  J Anim Sci Biotechnol       Date:  2015-10-15
  3 in total

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