Improving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservation

The experiments reported in this thesis were conducted to overcome limitations in conventional processes of <i>in vitro-</i>production of embryos and to develop novel procedures for cryopreservation of bovine oocytes and embryos. The experiments, concentrating initially on unfertilized o...

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Main Author: Moreira, Vanessa
Published: University of Aberdeen 2009
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.499657
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4996572015-03-20T04:07:33ZImproving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservationMoreira, Vanessa2009The experiments reported in this thesis were conducted to overcome limitations in conventional processes of <i>in vitro-</i>production of embryos and to develop novel procedures for cryopreservation of bovine oocytes and embryos. The experiments, concentrating initially on unfertilized oocytes and subsequently on embryos, used methods relevant to livestock reproductive biotechnology. Key aims were to overcome reliance on media using animal-derived constituents such as serum and albumin. Bovine oocytes matured <i>in vitro</i> in a novel biosafe formulation (MM1mat) excluding serum and albumin reached blastocyst stages (after <i>in vitro</i> fertilization) at rates equivalent to those achieved with conventional protocols (P&gt;0.05). Experiments that investigated development of bovine zygotes in an original series of protein-free culture media (V1 for embryos to Day 4 post-fertilization; V2a and similar formulations for Day 4 onwards) showed that sequential culture in V1/V2a did not compromise development to the blastocyst stage when compared to ‘monoculture’ in an albumin-supplemented medium (P&gt;0.05). Blastocysts produced in V1/V2a survived better after vitrification than counterparts produced in presence of albumin. Vitrification solutions (also often reliant on harmful serum-supplemented media) could be superseded by novel alternatives using V2a as a biohazard-free base medium. It was concluded that bovine blastocysts can be produced and cryopreserved safely in the novel media. A further important aspect of the investigations was that they developed a new biosecure ‘closed system’ for cryopreservation of oocytes and embryos. That system employed the CryoTip –which could be sealed before contact with liquid nitrogen – and the subsequent metabolic and biochemical studies on V1/V2a-produced blastocysts, either fresh or vitrified, indicated pyruvate metabolism, amino acids depletion and peroxide status parameters were equivalent to controls.636.089Cryopreservation : CattleUniversity of Aberdeenhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.499657http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk:80/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=25708Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 636.089
Cryopreservation : Cattle
spellingShingle 636.089
Cryopreservation : Cattle
Moreira, Vanessa
Improving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservation
description The experiments reported in this thesis were conducted to overcome limitations in conventional processes of <i>in vitro-</i>production of embryos and to develop novel procedures for cryopreservation of bovine oocytes and embryos. The experiments, concentrating initially on unfertilized oocytes and subsequently on embryos, used methods relevant to livestock reproductive biotechnology. Key aims were to overcome reliance on media using animal-derived constituents such as serum and albumin. Bovine oocytes matured <i>in vitro</i> in a novel biosafe formulation (MM1mat) excluding serum and albumin reached blastocyst stages (after <i>in vitro</i> fertilization) at rates equivalent to those achieved with conventional protocols (P&gt;0.05). Experiments that investigated development of bovine zygotes in an original series of protein-free culture media (V1 for embryos to Day 4 post-fertilization; V2a and similar formulations for Day 4 onwards) showed that sequential culture in V1/V2a did not compromise development to the blastocyst stage when compared to ‘monoculture’ in an albumin-supplemented medium (P&gt;0.05). Blastocysts produced in V1/V2a survived better after vitrification than counterparts produced in presence of albumin. Vitrification solutions (also often reliant on harmful serum-supplemented media) could be superseded by novel alternatives using V2a as a biohazard-free base medium. It was concluded that bovine blastocysts can be produced and cryopreserved safely in the novel media. A further important aspect of the investigations was that they developed a new biosecure ‘closed system’ for cryopreservation of oocytes and embryos. That system employed the CryoTip –which could be sealed before contact with liquid nitrogen – and the subsequent metabolic and biochemical studies on V1/V2a-produced blastocysts, either fresh or vitrified, indicated pyruvate metabolism, amino acids depletion and peroxide status parameters were equivalent to controls.
author Moreira, Vanessa
author_facet Moreira, Vanessa
author_sort Moreira, Vanessa
title Improving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservation
title_short Improving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservation
title_full Improving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservation
title_fullStr Improving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservation
title_full_unstemmed Improving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservation
title_sort improving biosecurity of bovine in vitro embryo production and cryopreservation
publisher University of Aberdeen
publishDate 2009
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.499657
work_keys_str_mv AT moreiravanessa improvingbiosecurityofbovineinvitroembryoproductionandcryopreservation
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