| Literature DB >> 28619101 |
Maaike Catteeuw1, Eline Wydooghe2, Erik Mullaart3, Hiemke M Knijn3, Ann Van Soom2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since the identity of the embryo is of outmost importance during commercial in vitro embryo production, bovine oocytes and embryos have to be cultured strictly per donor. Due to the rather low yield of oocytes collected after ovum pick-up (OPU) per individual cow, oocyte maturation and embryo culture take place in small groups, which is often associated with inferior embryo development. The objective of this study was to improve embryonic development in small donor groups by using the Corral® dish. This commercial dish is designed for human embryo production. It contains two central wells that are divided into quadrants by a semi-permeable wall. In human embryo culture, one embryo is placed per quadrant, allowing individual follow-up while embryos are exposed to a common medium. In our study, small groups of oocytes and subsequently embryos of different bovine donors were placed in the Corral® dish, each donor group in a separate quadrant.Entities:
Keywords: Bovine; Corral® dish; Donor; In vitro embryo production
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28619101 PMCID: PMC5472863 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-017-0309-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Fig. 1Design of the Corral® dish. a The Corral® dish consists of two central wells. b These central well is divided into quadrants by a solid wall with numerous posts on top, allowing medium and embryotrophic factors to pass (double arrow) but oocytes or embryos remained per individual donor in a quadrant (arrow). Each quadrant of the Corral® dish contains the oocytes or embryos of one specific donor and is filled with 30 µL medium
Fig. 2Schematic illustration of the two experiments. As indicated in the legend, oocytes and embryos were grouped per donor in a four-well dish, a droplet or in a quadrant of the Corral® dish during the different phases of the in vitro embryo production (in vitro maturation-IVM, in vitro fertilization-IVF, in vitro culture-IVC). Furthermore, the number of oocytes and embryos grouped together is indicated in the icons. (A) In experiment 1, embryos were placed per donor in the Corral® dish or in a separate drop during IVC. (B) In experiment 2, oocytes and embryos were assigned per donor to the Corral® dish during IVM or during IVM and IVC
Embryonic development in the different treatment groups of experiments 1 and 2
| Treatment | Number of oocytes | Cleavage (%) | Blastocysts D7 (%) | Blastocysts D8 (%) | % Hatched | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exp 1 | Drop IVC | 219 | 158 (72.1) | 41 (18.7) | 59 (26.9) | 22.0 |
| Corral® IVC | 234 | 169 (72.2) | 38 (16.2) | 58 (24.8) | 17.2 | |
| Exp 2 | Corral® IVM | 255 | 186 (72.9) | 33 (12.9)* | 68 (26.7) | 22.1 |
| Corral® IVM/IVC | 246 | 191 (77.6) | 56 (22.8)* | 74 (30.1) | 28.4 |
Fig. 3Graphic design of the Corral® dish. This figure is pointing out a distance of 4 mm between the deepest sites of the quadrants. An even larger distance has to be covered by the embryotrophic factors, secreted by the allocated cumulus–oocyte complexes or embryos, to reach another quadrant. The diffusion of secreted factors can only appear in a vertical and oblique direction (bold arrows), due to the well-shaped quadrants and the in-between wall