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Supplementing Bovine Embryo Culture Media to Improve the Production and Quality of In Vitro Produced Bovine Embryos

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Date

2020-04-09

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Publisher

Virginia Tech

Abstract

Initial studies in this work explored the role of interleukin-6 (IL6) and leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) in preimplantation bovine embryos. Neither cytokine affected the total percentage of embryos which developed to the blastocyst stage in vitro. However, supplementation of IL6 increased blastocyst inner cell mass (ICM) cell number without affecting trophectoderm (TE) cell number. Additionally, we found that IL6 activated signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) specifically within ICM cells. LIF, however, did not affect ICM cell number or activate STAT3 in ICM cells, and was not pursued further. This increase in ICM cell number by IL6 was largely comprised of hypoblast (GATA6+:NANOG-) cells, and most IL6-responsive cells in day 9 blastocysts were hypoblast cells (as measured by STAT3 activation). However, some epiblast (NANOG+) cells were also IL6-responsive, and IL6 appeared to initially slow epiblast differentiation. Finally, IL6-treated blastocysts also had increased transcripts of hypoblast/primitive endoderm (PE) markers. These results indicate that IL6 may improve pregnancy retention of IVP embryos by improving yolk sac development, but further work is needed to confirm this theory.

Activation of STAT3 by IL6 could be blocked with a chemical Janus kinase 2 (JAK2) inhibitor (AZD1480). JAK2 inhibition from day 5 to 8 resulted in blastocyst ICMs with fewer than 10% the normal cell number, regardless of IL6 supplementation. This indicates that STAT3 is critical for bovine ICM development. Further analysis revealed that inhibition of JAK2/STAT did not prevent ICM formation but disrupted its maintenance.

Additionally, we assessed the suitability of zinc sulfate and a bovine embryonic stem cell culture media (TeSR) for improving bovine embryo development in vitro. Zinc sulfate increased day 8 blastocyst total and ICM cell number. Therefore, zinc sulfate appears to improve blastocyst quality. The TeSR medium improved embryo development beyond day 8. In normal synthetic oviduct fluid, blastocysts degenerated after day 8, while blastocysts moved to TeSR had greatly increased cell numbers, and even exhibited PE migration out from the ICM, a phenomenon that has not been reported in vitro. This indicates that extended blastocyst culture is possible with TeSR media.

Description

Keywords

Interleukin-6, STAT3, Leukemia Inhibitory Factor, Inner Cell Mass, Zinc

Citation