6533b831fe1ef96bd129843f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Osmotic and cryoprotective effects of a mixture of DMSO and ethylene glycol on rabbit morulae.

Jose S. VicenteF. García-ximénez

subject

animal structuresCryoprotectantEquineDimethyl sulfoxideLiquid nitrogenBiologyCryopreservationAndrologychemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structureFood AnimalsBiochemistrychemistryEmbryo cryopreservationembryonic structuresmedicineAnimal Science and ZoologyVitrificationBlastocystSmall AnimalsEthylene glycol

description

Abstract Comparisons were made of the osmotic and cryoprotective effects on rabbit embryos preserved by vitrification with 2 solutions and by conventional freezing. Embryos obtained from rabbits killed 70 to 72 h after mating were used in the study (n = 948). Initially, toxicity of the 3 cryoprotectants was studied in fresh (unfrozen) embryos (n = 135). Subsequently, embryos placed in ethylene glycol (EG, 40% v/v; n = 88) and ethylene glycol with dimethyl sulfoxide (EG+DMSO, 20% v/v each, respectively; n = 344) were loaded into straws and plunged directly into liquid nitrogen. Embryos placed in 1.5 M DMSO and 20% heat inactivated rabbit serum were subjected to conventional freezing in a programmable freezer (control group, n = 363). The osmotic effect was estimated by measuring the changes in the embryonic and interzonal volume (crossectional area) and in the thickness of the mucin coat (n = 18). Cryoprotective effectivity was determined by development to the blastocyst stage in vitro, or birth of normal pups after transfer into synchronized recipients. Osmotic effects of cryoprotective solutions on embryonic and interzonal volume and mucin coat thickness were variable and overall not significant. Survival rate of cryopreserved embryos in vitro and development to blastocysts, was worst in the EG-treated embryos. Survival rate at birth was higher in vitrified vs frozen embryos. We conclude that rabbit morulae can be vitrified successfully in EG+DMSO medium.

10.1016/0093-691x(94)90869-9https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16727625