256 EFFECT OF EPIDERMAL GROWTH FACTOR ON IN VITRO MATURATION OF CYNOMOLGUS MONKEY (MACACA FASCICULARIS) OOCYTES

2008 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 208
Author(s):  
J. Yamasaki ◽  
J. Okahara-Narita ◽  
C. Iwatani ◽  
H. Tsuchiya ◽  
S. Nakamura ◽  
...  

Collected oocytes include not only mature oocytes (metaphase II: MII), but also immature oocytes (germinal vesicle: GV, and metaphase I: MI). To establish a dependable artificial indoor breeding program in cynomolgus monkeys, we are planning to carry out in vitro maturation (IVM) using GV and MI oocytes. In this study, we attempted to determine whether different types of feeder layers and epidermal growth factor (EGF) were effective for IVM. Cumulus–oocyte complexes (COCs) were collected from ovaries of 4–10-year-old female cynomolgus monkeys stimulated by the combination of FSH (25 IU kg–1 × 9 days) and hCG (400 IU kg–1) (Torii 2000 Primates 39, 399–406). Oocytes were classified by morphological features: oocytes retaining an intact germinal vesicle nucleus (GV); oocytes that had undergone germinal vesicle breakdown without polar body formation (MI); and oocytes with a first polar body (MII). GV and MI oocytes were co-cultured on monkey cumulus cells (MCC), monkey follicular ovarian cells (MFOC), monkey oviductal cells (MOC), or human solubilized amnion product (HSAP), with TCM-199+10% fetal bovine serum containing epidermal growth factor (EGF; 10 ng mL–1 or 20 ng mL–1). The maturation rate from GV to MII oocytes was 6.7% (MCC), 18.0% (MFOC), 35.7% (MOC), and 28.6% (HSAP) (Table 1). Although higher maturity was observed in MOC and HSAP, the effect of EGF was not found in co-cultures using any feeder layers. The maturation rate from MI to MII oocytes was 33.3% (MCC), 27.8% (MFOC), 55.6% (MOC), and 44.0% (HSAP) (Table 1). The highest maturation rate from GV and MI was observed in co-cultures using MOC. The maturation rate from MI to MII oocytes in the presence of 10 ng mL–1 EGF was 75.0% (MCC) and 73.7% (HSAP) (Table 1), whereas the rate in the presence of 20 ng mL–1 EGF was 59.1% (MCC), 64.3% (MFOC), 92.3% (MOC), and 60.0% (HSAP) (Table 1). Thus, the best maturation rate was a co-culture using MOC as a feeder layer with 20 ng mL–1 EGF. According to our results, maturation rate during IVM depends on the cellular type of feeder layers and the concentration of EGF. EGF is especially effective for maturity from MI to MII oocytes, but not from GV to MI or MII oocytes. Thus, IVM should be carred out under optimal culture conditions, including suitable feeder layer and media plus supplements. In the future, it is important that intracytoplasmic sperm injection be carried out using in vitro-matured MII oocytes for establishment of an artificial indoor breeding program in cynomolgus monkeys. Table 1. Number of matured oocytes co-cultured with different feeder layers and EGF

1998 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 1638-1644 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. T. Goud ◽  
A. P. Goud ◽  
C. Qian ◽  
H. Laverge ◽  
J. Van der Elst ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 157
Author(s):  
H. B. Seok ◽  
J. H. Quan ◽  
S. K. Kim

The purpose of this study was to investigate in vitro maturation rate of oocytes cultured in maturation medium supplemented with epidermal growth factor (EGF), β-mercaptoethanol (ME), and glucose, and the further development of NT embryos under various conditions. The basic media used for oocyte maturation were NCSU-23 and PZM-3 supplemented with 0.1 mg mL-1 cysteine, 10% (v/v) porcine follicular fluid (pFF), 10 �g mL-1 FSH, 10 �g mL-1 LH, 20 ng mL-1 EGF, and 25 �M ME. Porcine ovaries were collected at a local slaughterhouse, and donor cells from a 35-day-old fetus were dissociated, resuspended, and cultured for 6–8 days in DMEM supplemented with 10% (v/v) FBS, penicillin G (75 �g mL-1), streptomycin (50 �g mL-1), 1 mM sodium pyruvate, and 1% (v/v) nonessential amino acids. The first polar body and adjacent cytoplasm were enucleated by a micropipette in HEPES-buffered NCSU-23 supplemented with 4 mg mL-1 BSA and 7.5 �g mL-1 cytochalasin B. Couplets were equilibrated with 0.3 M mannitol solution and transferred to a chamber containing 2 electrodes with a pulse of 2.1 kV cm-1 for 30 �s. When the embryos were cultured in NCSU-23 or PZM-3 supplemented with or without 20 ng mL-1 EGF for 144 h, the development rates to the blastocyst stage were 12.0 � 1.3%, 9.6 � 1.9%, 10.9 � 2.1%, and 9.1 � 2.3%, respectively. When the embryos were cultured in NCSU-23 or PZM-3 supplemented with or without 25 �M ME for 144 h, the rates to blastocyst stage were 9.6 � 1.7%, 7.3 � 2.3%, 11.9 � 1.8%, and 7.4 � 2.1%, respectively. The developmental rate to the blastocyst stage of NT embryos cultured in PZM-3 supplemented with ME was significantly higher than when cultured without ME supplementation (P < 0.05). When the embryos were cultured in NCSU-23 or PZM-3 supplemented with or without 1.5 mM glucose for 144 h, the rates to blastocyst stage were 9.4 � 2.2%, 6.8 � 2.7%, 10.9 � 2.4%, and 8.9 � 2.6%, respectively. The developmental rate to the blastocyst stage of NT embryos cultured in NCSU-23 and PZM-3 supplemented with glucose was higher than when cultured without glucose supplementation. When NT embryos were cultured in NUSU-23 and PZM-3 at 5% and 20% O2 concentration, the rates were 11.1 � 1.8%, 9.8 � 1.4%, 12.5 � 1.6%, and 10.9 � 1.5%, respectively. The developmental rate to the blastocyst stage of NT embryos cultured in both NCSU-23 and PZM-3 at 5% O2 concentration was higher than when cultured at 20% O2 concentration. When fetal fibroblasts were cultured in NCSU-23 and PZM-3, the fusion rate of less than 10 passages was higher than for those of 11–15 passages. In conclusion, the present study indicates that EGF and glucose have beneficial effects on the in vitro maturation of oocytes, and ME improves the developmental ability of NT embryos. Furthermore, the developmental rate in subcultured fibroblast cells was improved when reconstruction was made with less than 10 passages.


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