Ploidy of Bovine Nuclear Transfer Blastocysts Blastomere Donors

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Standard

Ploidy of Bovine Nuclear Transfer Blastocysts Blastomere Donors. / Booth, P J; VIUFF, D; THOMSEN, P D; Holm, P; Greve, T; Callesen, H.

I: Cloning, Bind 2, Nr. 2, 2000, s. 63-69.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Booth, PJ, VIUFF, D, THOMSEN, PD, Holm, P, Greve, T & Callesen, H 2000, 'Ploidy of Bovine Nuclear Transfer Blastocysts Blastomere Donors', Cloning, bind 2, nr. 2, s. 63-69.

APA

Booth, P. J., VIUFF, D., THOMSEN, P. D., Holm, P., Greve, T., & Callesen, H. (2000). Ploidy of Bovine Nuclear Transfer Blastocysts Blastomere Donors. Cloning, 2(2), 63-69.

Vancouver

Booth PJ, VIUFF D, THOMSEN PD, Holm P, Greve T, Callesen H. Ploidy of Bovine Nuclear Transfer Blastocysts Blastomere Donors. Cloning. 2000;2(2):63-69.

Author

Booth, P J ; VIUFF, D ; THOMSEN, P D ; Holm, P ; Greve, T ; Callesen, H. / Ploidy of Bovine Nuclear Transfer Blastocysts Blastomere Donors. I: Cloning. 2000 ; Bind 2, Nr. 2. s. 63-69.

Bibtex

@article{c8d08cbc04314cc88538006ffeffc103,
title = "Ploidy of Bovine Nuclear Transfer Blastocysts Blastomere Donors",
abstract = "The higher rate of embryonic loss in nuclear transfer compared to in vitro produced embryos may be due to chromosome abnormalities that occur during preimplantation in vitro devel- opment. Because little is known about ploidy errors in nuclear transfer embryos, this was ex- amined using embryos reconstructed from in vitro produced embryo donors. In vitro matured oocytes were enucleated and then activated using calcium ionophore A23187 followed by 6- dimethylaminopurine (6-DMAP). Subsequently, embryos were reconstructed using blas- tomeres from day 4–5 in vitro produced donors. The embryos were cultured until day 7 at which time blastocyst nuclei were extracted and chromosome abnormalities were evaluated by fluorescent in situ hybridization using two probes that bind to the subcentromeric regions on chromosomes 6 and 7. In 16 nuclear transfer blastocysts generated from 5 donor embryos, 53.8 6 20.2 (mean SD) nuclei/embryo were examined. Of these 16, 7 embryos (43.8 were potentially abnormal because in these, 1.1 1.4 5.3 7.5 26.3 30.4 and 66.2% % of the nuclei had a chromosome composition deviating from the diploid condition, indicating a wide degree of variation between embryos. These errors comprised mainly triploid (8.2 6 10.3 [0–26.3]: SD [range]) and tetraploid (10.6 6 19.9 [0–54.9]) nuclei with other ploidy com- binations accounting for only 0.9 6 2.1 [0–2.1]% of deviant nuclei. The proportion of com- pletely normal nuclear transfer embryos was no less than those produced by in vitro fertil- ization but the distribution of chromosome abnormalities was different (p 5 0.0002). In conclusion, nuclear transfer embryos reconstructed using blastomere cells can produce over 50% blastocysts with a diploid chromosome complement. However, the contribution of chro- mosome abnormalities to embryonic loss in the remaining embryos deserves further investi- gation",
author = "Booth, {P J} and D VIUFF and THOMSEN, {P D} and P Holm and T Greve and H Callesen",
year = "2000",
language = "Udefineret/Ukendt",
volume = "2",
pages = "63--69",
journal = "Cloning",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ploidy of Bovine Nuclear Transfer Blastocysts Blastomere Donors

AU - Booth, P J

AU - VIUFF, D

AU - THOMSEN, P D

AU - Holm, P

AU - Greve, T

AU - Callesen, H

PY - 2000

Y1 - 2000

N2 - The higher rate of embryonic loss in nuclear transfer compared to in vitro produced embryos may be due to chromosome abnormalities that occur during preimplantation in vitro devel- opment. Because little is known about ploidy errors in nuclear transfer embryos, this was ex- amined using embryos reconstructed from in vitro produced embryo donors. In vitro matured oocytes were enucleated and then activated using calcium ionophore A23187 followed by 6- dimethylaminopurine (6-DMAP). Subsequently, embryos were reconstructed using blas- tomeres from day 4–5 in vitro produced donors. The embryos were cultured until day 7 at which time blastocyst nuclei were extracted and chromosome abnormalities were evaluated by fluorescent in situ hybridization using two probes that bind to the subcentromeric regions on chromosomes 6 and 7. In 16 nuclear transfer blastocysts generated from 5 donor embryos, 53.8 6 20.2 (mean SD) nuclei/embryo were examined. Of these 16, 7 embryos (43.8 were potentially abnormal because in these, 1.1 1.4 5.3 7.5 26.3 30.4 and 66.2% % of the nuclei had a chromosome composition deviating from the diploid condition, indicating a wide degree of variation between embryos. These errors comprised mainly triploid (8.2 6 10.3 [0–26.3]: SD [range]) and tetraploid (10.6 6 19.9 [0–54.9]) nuclei with other ploidy com- binations accounting for only 0.9 6 2.1 [0–2.1]% of deviant nuclei. The proportion of com- pletely normal nuclear transfer embryos was no less than those produced by in vitro fertil- ization but the distribution of chromosome abnormalities was different (p 5 0.0002). In conclusion, nuclear transfer embryos reconstructed using blastomere cells can produce over 50% blastocysts with a diploid chromosome complement. However, the contribution of chro- mosome abnormalities to embryonic loss in the remaining embryos deserves further investi- gation

AB - The higher rate of embryonic loss in nuclear transfer compared to in vitro produced embryos may be due to chromosome abnormalities that occur during preimplantation in vitro devel- opment. Because little is known about ploidy errors in nuclear transfer embryos, this was ex- amined using embryos reconstructed from in vitro produced embryo donors. In vitro matured oocytes were enucleated and then activated using calcium ionophore A23187 followed by 6- dimethylaminopurine (6-DMAP). Subsequently, embryos were reconstructed using blas- tomeres from day 4–5 in vitro produced donors. The embryos were cultured until day 7 at which time blastocyst nuclei were extracted and chromosome abnormalities were evaluated by fluorescent in situ hybridization using two probes that bind to the subcentromeric regions on chromosomes 6 and 7. In 16 nuclear transfer blastocysts generated from 5 donor embryos, 53.8 6 20.2 (mean SD) nuclei/embryo were examined. Of these 16, 7 embryos (43.8 were potentially abnormal because in these, 1.1 1.4 5.3 7.5 26.3 30.4 and 66.2% % of the nuclei had a chromosome composition deviating from the diploid condition, indicating a wide degree of variation between embryos. These errors comprised mainly triploid (8.2 6 10.3 [0–26.3]: SD [range]) and tetraploid (10.6 6 19.9 [0–54.9]) nuclei with other ploidy com- binations accounting for only 0.9 6 2.1 [0–2.1]% of deviant nuclei. The proportion of com- pletely normal nuclear transfer embryos was no less than those produced by in vitro fertil- ization but the distribution of chromosome abnormalities was different (p 5 0.0002). In conclusion, nuclear transfer embryos reconstructed using blastomere cells can produce over 50% blastocysts with a diploid chromosome complement. However, the contribution of chro- mosome abnormalities to embryonic loss in the remaining embryos deserves further investi- gation

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 2

SP - 63

EP - 69

JO - Cloning

JF - Cloning

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 141568142