摘要
Protocols for the production of bovine embryos in vitro routinely include Percoll centrifugation of semen, usually include heparin, and often include penicillamine, hypotaurine, and epinephrine (PHE) in the fertilization media. This study examined the contribution of each of these components to the success of in vitro fertilization of bovine oocytes and subsequent blastocyst development. Bovine oocytes were aspirated from 2- to 10-mm follicles within 5 h after slaughter of cattle at a local abattoir. Groups of 30 to 40 cumulus–oocyte complexes (COC) were matured in 0.5 mL of TCM-199 with 10% FCS, 4 µg mL–1 of FSH, and 6 µg mL–1 of LH (NOBL Laboratories, Sioux Center, IA, USA) for 24 h (39°C, 4% CO2 in air). The COC were then washed and placed in 0.5 mL of modified Tyrode-lactate medium for IVF with various combinations of 2 µg mL–1 of heparin, 20 µM penicillamine, 10 µM hypotaurine, and 1 µM epinephrine. Each group of COC was inseminated with 0.25 × 106 frozen–thawed sperm from a single bull after 30 min of centrifugation with (Exp. 1) or without (Exp. 2) a 45/90% Percoll gradient with sperm TALP. Oocytes were vortexed to remove the cumulus after 18 h and placed in co-culture wells containing a monolayer of buffalo rat liver cells and 0.5 mL of Menezo’s B2 medium supplemented with 10% FCS. On the fourth day of in vitro culture, cleavage was defined as 2 cells or greater and embryos were transferred to fresh co-culture wells. There were 4 replicates in the first experiment and 6 in the second. Data were analysed by ANOVA. In the first experiment, the use of a Percoll gradient during centrifugation for separation of viable sperm from seminal plasma and cryprotectants resulted in significantly higher cleavage and Day 8 blastocyst rates than did the absence of Percoll when PHE and heparin were used together, and both cleavage and blastocyst rates were lower when only PHE or heparin was used separately compared with when both were used together (Table 1). The absence of Percoll, PHE, and heparin resulted in the lowest rates of cleavage and development. In the second experiment, the absence of either PHE or heparin resulted in lower cleavage rates, but not blastocyst rates, compared with the use of both, and the absence of both resulted in the lowest cleavage and blastocyst rates in spite of the use of Percoll. Table 1.Effects of Percoll; penicillamine, hypotaurine, and epinephrine (PHE); and heparin on cleavage and subsequent embryo development per oocyte