6533b871fe1ef96bd12d1b88

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ultrastructure of preimplantation genetic diagnosis-derived human blastocysts grown in a coculture system after vitrification

María-josé EscribáAmparo MercaderMaría-josé De Los SantosAntonio PellicerCarmen EscobedoJosé Remohí

subject

CryopreservationTight junctionHatchingObstetrics and GynecologyEmbryoAnatomyBiologyPreimplantation genetic diagnosisCoculture TechniquesCryopreservationAndrologyBlastocystmedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive MedicineCytogenetic Analysisembryonic structuresmedicineUltrastructureHumansInner cell massBlastocystCells CulturedPreimplantation Diagnosis

description

Objective To evaluate ultrastructural features of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) blastocysts before and after vitrification. Design Descriptive study of both vitrified and fresh hatching blastocysts. Setting PGD program at the Instituto Universitario, Instituto Valenciano de Infertilidad. Patient(s) Patients undergoing PGD donated their abnormal embryos for research (n = 26). Intervention(s) Biopsied embryos were cultured in the presence of human endometrial cells until day 6. Sixteen blastocysts were vitrified. A total of 11 high-scored hatching blastocysts, 6 warmed and 5 fresh, were fixed for ultrastructure. Main Outcome Measure(s) The cytoskeleton structure, type of intercellular junctions, and basic intracellular organelles in trophoectoderm cells and the inner cell mass were analyzed. Result(s) Ten of 16 blastocysts (62%) survived the warming process. Six of these showed no signs of cell degeneration and light microscopy revealed similar ultrastructural characteristics to those of controls. However, in trophoectoderm cells from both fresh and cryopreserved blastocysts, a reduced number of tight junctions and the presence of degradation bodies were detected. Conclusion(s) The particular ultrastructural features observed in PGD-derived blastocysts could be related to embryo manipulation and culture conditions. Vitrification does not seem to alter blastocysts, as those that survive hatching do not display detectable cellular alterations when observed through electron microscopy.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fertnstert.2006.01.033