BACKGROUND: Sperm desiccation is an attractive approach for sperm preservation. In this study, we examined the feasibility and efficiency of intracytoplasmic sperm injection using vacuum-dried rhesus macaque sperm in CZB medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. METHODS: A total of 109 MII oocytes were injected with 69 fresh ejaculated sperm and 40 vacuum-dried sperm. RESULTS: Cleavage occurred in 97% of oocytes injected with fresh, motile sperm and in 88% of oocytes injected with vacuum-dried sperm. Of the cleaved oocytes, 68% fresh sperm-injected oocytes and 74% of dried sperm-injected oocytes developed to the compact morula stage. Blastocyst development was comparable between fresh-injected (16%) and vacuum-dried-injected (17%) oocytes. Differences between treatment groups were not significant. Transmission electron microscopic observation of the blastocysts indicated no detectable differences between fresh sperm and dried sperm-derived embryos. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that vacuum-dried rhesus macaque sperm are capable of inducing fertilization and development of pre-implantation embryos when sperm were dried under vacuum and microinjected into normal viable oocytes.
BACKGROUND: Sperm desiccation is an attractive approach for sperm preservation. In this study, we examined the feasibility and efficiency of intracytoplasmic sperm injection using vacuum-dried rhesus macaque sperm in CZB medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. METHODS: A total of 109 MII oocytes were injected with 69 fresh ejaculated sperm and 40 vacuum-dried sperm. RESULTS: Cleavage occurred in 97% of oocytes injected with fresh, motile sperm and in 88% of oocytes injected with vacuum-dried sperm. Of the cleaved oocytes, 68% fresh sperm-injected oocytes and 74% of dried sperm-injected oocytes developed to the compact morula stage. Blastocyst development was comparable between fresh-injected (16%) and vacuum-dried-injected (17%) oocytes. Differences between treatment groups were not significant. Transmission electron microscopic observation of the blastocysts indicated no detectable differences between fresh sperm and dried sperm-derived embryos. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that vacuum-dried rhesus macaque sperm are capable of inducing fertilization and development of pre-implantation embryos when sperm were dried under vacuum and microinjected into normal viable oocytes.
Authors: James L Chitwood; Victoria R Burruel; Michelle M Halstead; Stuart A Meyers; Pablo J Ross Journal: Biol Reprod Date: 2017-09-01 Impact factor: 4.285
Authors: Victoria Burruel; Katie Klooster; Christopher M Barker; Renee Reijo Pera; Stuart Meyers Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2014-10-13 Impact factor: 4.379