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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Sex-dependent loss of bisected bovine morulae after culture and freezing.

The objective of this study was to determine the post-transfer survival rate of bovine embryos cultured between the time of bisection and freezing. In this experiment 158 morulae were bisected and both portions were cultured for 24-44 h either in vivo after transfer to sheep oviducts (n = 80 morulae) or in vitro (n = 78 morulae) in Ham's F10 medium with 20% fetal calf serum, with bovine oviduct cells or in medium collected from oviduct cultures (conditioned medium). After culture, half of each morula was fixed for cytogenetic sex determination (n = 125) and the other half was frozen. The frozen halves were later thawed and transferred (n = 115) to recipients, who were, if pregnant, slaughtered to determine the sex of the fetus. The culture resulted in better pregnancy rates than those previously reported for embryos frozen immediately after bisection. The sex of 49 (33 males, 16 females) of the fixed demi-morulae was determined, and 38 of the transferred demi-morulae established pregnancies (23 males, 10 females and 5 fetuses that were not recovered). The male:female ratio in in vivo and in vitro culture groups was significantly different from the expected ratio of 1:1 and suggests that manipulation and culture of embryos results in a preferential loss of female embryos.[1]

References

  1. Sex-dependent loss of bisected bovine morulae after culture and freezing. King, W.A., Picard, L., Bousquet, D., Goff, A.K. J. Reprod. Fertil. (1992) [Pubmed]
 
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