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Embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro

Failures during conceptus elongation are a major cause of pregnancy losses in ungulates, exerting a relevant economic impact on farming. The developmental events occurring during this period are poorly understood, mainly because this process cannot be recapitulated in vitro. Previous studies have es...

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Autores principales: Ramos-Ibeas, Priscila, Lamas-Toranzo, Ismael, Martínez-Moro, Álvaro, de Frutos, Celia, Quiroga, Alejandra C, Zurita, Esther, Bermejo-Álvarez, Pablo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Bioscientifica Ltd 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7497357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32698149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/REP-20-0243
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author Ramos-Ibeas, Priscila
Lamas-Toranzo, Ismael
Martínez-Moro, Álvaro
de Frutos, Celia
Quiroga, Alejandra C
Zurita, Esther
Bermejo-Álvarez, Pablo
author_facet Ramos-Ibeas, Priscila
Lamas-Toranzo, Ismael
Martínez-Moro, Álvaro
de Frutos, Celia
Quiroga, Alejandra C
Zurita, Esther
Bermejo-Álvarez, Pablo
author_sort Ramos-Ibeas, Priscila
collection PubMed
description Failures during conceptus elongation are a major cause of pregnancy losses in ungulates, exerting a relevant economic impact on farming. The developmental events occurring during this period are poorly understood, mainly because this process cannot be recapitulated in vitro. Previous studies have established an in vitro post-hatching development (PHD) system that supports bovine embryo development beyond the blastocyst stage, based on agarose gel tunnels and serum- and glucose-enriched medium. Unfortunately, under this system embryonic disc formation is not achieved and embryos show notorious signs of apoptosis and necrosis. The objective of this study has been to develop an in vitro system able to support embryonic disc formation. We first compared post-hatching development inside agarose tunnels or free-floating over an agarose-coated dish in serum- and glucose-enriched medium (PHD medium). Culture inside agarose tunnels shaped embryo morphology by physical constriction, but it restricted embryo growth and did not provide any significant advantage in terms of development of hypoblast and epiblast lineages. In contrast to PHD medium, a chemically defined and enriched medium (N2B27) supported complete hypoblast migration and epiblast survival in vitro, even in the absence of agarose coating. Cells expressing the pluripotency marker SOX2 were observed in ~56% of the embryos and ~25% developed embryonic disc-like structures formed by SOX2+ cells. In summary, here we provide a culture system that supports trophectoderm proliferation, hypoblast migration and epiblast survival after the blastocyst stage.
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spelling pubmed-74973572020-09-22 Embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro Ramos-Ibeas, Priscila Lamas-Toranzo, Ismael Martínez-Moro, Álvaro de Frutos, Celia Quiroga, Alejandra C Zurita, Esther Bermejo-Álvarez, Pablo Reproduction Research Failures during conceptus elongation are a major cause of pregnancy losses in ungulates, exerting a relevant economic impact on farming. The developmental events occurring during this period are poorly understood, mainly because this process cannot be recapitulated in vitro. Previous studies have established an in vitro post-hatching development (PHD) system that supports bovine embryo development beyond the blastocyst stage, based on agarose gel tunnels and serum- and glucose-enriched medium. Unfortunately, under this system embryonic disc formation is not achieved and embryos show notorious signs of apoptosis and necrosis. The objective of this study has been to develop an in vitro system able to support embryonic disc formation. We first compared post-hatching development inside agarose tunnels or free-floating over an agarose-coated dish in serum- and glucose-enriched medium (PHD medium). Culture inside agarose tunnels shaped embryo morphology by physical constriction, but it restricted embryo growth and did not provide any significant advantage in terms of development of hypoblast and epiblast lineages. In contrast to PHD medium, a chemically defined and enriched medium (N2B27) supported complete hypoblast migration and epiblast survival in vitro, even in the absence of agarose coating. Cells expressing the pluripotency marker SOX2 were observed in ~56% of the embryos and ~25% developed embryonic disc-like structures formed by SOX2+ cells. In summary, here we provide a culture system that supports trophectoderm proliferation, hypoblast migration and epiblast survival after the blastocyst stage. Bioscientifica Ltd 2020-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7497357/ /pubmed/32698149 http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/REP-20-0243 Text en © 2020 The authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research
Ramos-Ibeas, Priscila
Lamas-Toranzo, Ismael
Martínez-Moro, Álvaro
de Frutos, Celia
Quiroga, Alejandra C
Zurita, Esther
Bermejo-Álvarez, Pablo
Embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro
title Embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro
title_full Embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro
title_fullStr Embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro
title_full_unstemmed Embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro
title_short Embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro
title_sort embryonic disc formation following post-hatching bovine embryo development in vitro
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7497357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32698149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1530/REP-20-0243
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