Embryo Splitting COPY COPY Flashcards
1
Q
What is Embryo-splitting?
A
- Identical twins (or more) can be made by splitting a day-6 embryo (blastocyst before hatching from ZP) and placing the fragments into empty ZP shells and then transferring them into recipients (E.T.)
2
Q
What is the procedure for embryo splitting?
A
- Egg and Sperm are joined (naturally or in vitro)
- When embryo reaches about 8-cell stage (~6days post ovulation) it is split one or more times
- At this stage embryo is a blastocyst and has not hatched from ZP
- Only very good quality embryos are split
- A micromanipulator scope, vacuum tips, and microblades are used
- 2 or more pieces of the original embryo are placed in empty ZP
- empty ZP created by sucking out the contents of an egg or embryo (poor-quality or degenerating)
- Embryos are transferred into a recipient that is on the same day post ovulation as the donor (i.e. day 6 or 7 post ovulation)
- Survivability of split embryos is less than un-manipulated embryos - but not too bad
- Overall success is greater than un-manipulated embryos (greater efficiency of E.T.)
3
Q
What is Cloning (Nuclear Transfer)?
A
- Multiple genetically identical animals can be produced by taking cells from an embryonic blastocyst and implanting them into enucleated oocytes which are transferred to a recipients
4
Q
When was Nuclear Transfer first done?
A
- 1986 - Steen Willadsen cloned lambs using cells from sheep embryos
5
Q
How is Nuclear transfer done?
A
- Remove DNA from unfertilized egg
- Remove one cell from a donor embryo
- most often in blastocyst stage
- could get ~60 clones from 1 embryo
- Transfer embryo cell to egg
- Fuse cells and transfer
6
Q
How is Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer (SCNT) done?
A
- Donor cells: biopsy from ear of animal to be cloned (2N)
- Recipient cells: eggs collected from slaughterhouse ovaries (1N)
7
Q
What causes Cloned Calf Syndrome?
A
- SCNT Clone Pregnancies: 70% pregnancies lost in first trimester - up to 95% total loss
- Natural - 1-3%
- IVF - 5% cattle, 11% sheep
- Don’t fully understand why the embryos/fetuses/calves are not the same
- Culture conditions may be involved
- Placenta may not develop normally
- inappropriate transition from yolk sac to allantoic nutrition?
- Failure of normal placentome development
8
Q
What is Cloned Calf Syndrome?
A
- Calves that complete gestation:
- increased birthweight (fetomegaly)
- Abnormal placentas - placental edema
- Few/huge placentomes
- Normally, fetal growth is constrained by maternal and placental factors
- ⇑ placental origin IGF-1 (overcome maternal constraint on fetal growth in late gestation?)
- Respiratory Distress Syndrome
- pulmonary hypertension
- poor adrenal gland development/function
- Low fetal cortisol leads to insufficient lung surfactant
- Treatment of recipient dam with cortisol prior to delivery (aid final maturation of lungs) and oxygen therapy in the neonatal period
- Pneumonia:
- Predisposed to infectious disease?
- Immune dysfunction?
- increased birthweight (fetomegaly)
- If calves survive the first couple weeks - they can grow to be healthy and have a normal life