Microinjection and in vitro culture procedures were developed to produce transgenic bovine embryos after in vitro fertilization of in vitro matured oocytes. In Experiment I, zygotes were subjected to pronuclear microinjection of DNA 18 or 24 h following addition of spermatozoa to oocytes. Microinjections were performed in either Hepes-buffered TCM-199 or modified Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline without glucose. Viability of embryos was similar at both injection times and for both media, as determined by morphological evaluation after culturing embryos in vitro for 10 d. In Experiment II, microinjected embryos were cultured 1) in rabbit oviducts, 2) in vitro in a 5% CO(2) in air, or 3) in a 5% CO(2) / 5% O(2) / 90% N(2) incubator. There were no significant differences between the 2 in vitro culture environments. The in vitro culture systems supported development of embryos significantly better than the rabbit oviducts; 33% of cleaved ova developed to blastocysts in vitro vs 10% in vivo; 98% of transferred ova were recovered from the rabbit oviducts. From both experiments, 6 of 92 blastocysts were positive for the microinjected DNA as determined by a polymerase chain reaction followed by gel electrophoresis.
| UI | MeSH Term | Description | Entries |
|---|