Adding essential amino acids at a low concentration improves the development of in vitro fertilized porcine embryos

Date

2009

Authors

Beebe, L.
Vassiliev, I.
McIlfatrick, S.
Nottle, M.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Journal of Reproduction and Development, 2009; 55(4):373-377

Statement of Responsibility

Luke F.S. Beebe, Ivan Vassiliev, Stephan McIlfatrick and Mark B. Nottle

Conference Name

Abstract

The aims of this study were to investigate improvements to the pig preimplantation embryo culture system using in vitro produced embryos. For experiment 1, the optimum time to change the medium from NCSU23 containing 0.6 mM glucose, 0.2 mM pyruvate, 5.7 mM lactate and nonessential amino acids to NCSU23 containing 5.6 mM glucose and both essential and nonessential amino acids was examined. There were no statistically significant differences in blastocyst rates or cell number when the medium was changed at 48, 72 or 96 h, although there was a consistent trend for the 96 h treatment to produce fewer blastocysts with fewer cells. For experiment 2, the addition of essential amino acids at either a 1:50 or a 1:100 dilution of the purchased stock solution for day 1 to 6 or for days 3 to 6 only was investigated. Adding essential amino acids at a 1:50 dilution for day 3 to 6 significantly reduced the blastocyst rate and adding them at a 1:50 dilution from day 1 to 6 significantly reduced both the blastocyst rate and blastocyst cell number compared to when it was added at a 1:100 dilution. Embryos were produced by IVF, cultured for 6 days and good quality blastocysts were transferred into 6 synchronized pseudopregnant recipients (24 to 35 blastocysts per recipient) resulting in 4 pregnancies and 21 live birth piglets. These results show that adding essential amino acids at a 1:100 dilution provided the best culture conditions and the blastocysts produced were able to attain full term development after transfer.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

(c) 2009 Society for Reproduction and Development

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record