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1 February 2003 Handmade Somatic Cell Cloning in Cattle: Analysis of Factors Contributing to High Efficiency In Vitro
Gábor Vajta, Ian M. Lewis, Alan O. Trounson, Stig Purup, Poul Maddox-Hyttel, Mette Schmidt, Hanne Gervi Pedersen, Torben Greve, Henrik Callesen
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Abstract

Widespread application of somatic cell cloning has been hampered by biological and technical problems, which include complicated and time-consuming procedures requiring skilled labor. Recently, zona-free techniques have been published with limited or no requirement for micromanipulators. The purpose of the present work was to optimize certain steps of the micromanipulator-free (i.e., handmade) procedure, to analyze the morphology of the developing blastocysts, and to explain factors involved in the high efficiencies observed. Optimization of the procedure included selection of the appropriate medium for enucleation, orientation of pairs at fusion, timing of fusion, and culture conditions. As a result of these improved steps, in vitro efficiency as measured by blastocysts per reconstructed embryo and blastocysts per working hour was among the highest described so far. The cattle serum used in our experiments was superior to other protein sources for in vitro embryo development. One possible explanation of this effect is the considerable mitogenic activity of the cattle serum compared with that of commercially available fetal calf serum. Morphological analysis of blastocysts by inverted microscopy, inner cell mass-trophoblast differential staining, and transmission electron microscopy revealed high average quality. A high initial pregnancy rate was achieved after the transfer of single blastocysts derived by aggregation of two nuclear transfer embryos into recipients. The improved handmade somatic cell nuclear transfer method may become a useful technology as a simple, inexpensive, and efficient alternative to traditional somatic cell nuclear transfer.

Gábor Vajta, Ian M. Lewis, Alan O. Trounson, Stig Purup, Poul Maddox-Hyttel, Mette Schmidt, Hanne Gervi Pedersen, Torben Greve, and Henrik Callesen "Handmade Somatic Cell Cloning in Cattle: Analysis of Factors Contributing to High Efficiency In Vitro," Biology of Reproduction 68(2), 571-578, (1 February 2003). https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod.102.008771
Received: 1 July 2002; Accepted: 1 September 2002; Published: 1 February 2003
KEYWORDS
developmental biology
embryo
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