Different pre-implantation phenotypes of bovine blastocysts produced in vitro.


  • Publication date : 2018-11-01

Reference

Hue I, Dufort I, Vitorino Carvalho A, Laloe D, Peynot N, Degrelle SA, Viebahn C, Sirard MA. Different pre-implantation phenotypes of bovine blastocysts produced in vitro. Reproduction. 2018 Nov 1. pii: REP-18-0439.R1. doi: 10.1530/REP-18-0439. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed PMID: 30444718.

Abstract

Embryo transfer in cattle is performed with blastocysts produced in vivo or in vitro using defined media. However, outdated systems such as those that use serum and co-culture remain of interest for research purposes. Here, we investigated the effect of additional culture time on in vitro-produced embryos. Specifically, we compared embryos that formed a blastocoel at different times after fertilisation to those that stayed in culture for up to two additional days with respect to their development in vivo after temporary transfer to oestrus-synchronised recipients. A pre-transfer set (D6, D6+1, D6+2, D7, D7+1, D8) was examined using microarray analyses, and correlated with a post-transfer set that included two different days of transfer (D6-T6, D6+2-T8, D7+1-T8, D8-T8). All surviving conceptuses reached primitive-streak stages and filamentous sizes similarly to in vivo (D18) or in vitro controls (D7/T7). The recovery rate differed between D6 and D8 embryos that were immediately transferred (58% vs 25%). With an intermediate survival rate (33%), the D6 embryos with two additional days in culture produced 9 times more IFN-tau at D18 than the D6 embryos that were immediately transferred. At the end of culture, D6 and D6+2 embryos displayed the highest number of gene expression differences. Despite a mortality of 40-60%, no signature was detectable in any of the transferred groups that would account for the embryos' fates. Initially reputed to be beneficial in producing more blastocysts our culture system of B2 medium plus serum and co-culture generated blastocysts that were distinct from those developed in vivo (D7).