Full-Term Development of Rat after Transfer of Nuclei from Two-Cell Stage Embryos
Cloning technology would allow targeted genetic alterations in the rat, a species which is yet unaccessible for such studies due to the lack of germline-competent embryonic stem cells. The present study was performed to examine the developmental ability of reconstructed rat embryos after transfer of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biology of reproduction 2006-10, Vol.75 (4), p.524-530 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Cloning technology would allow targeted genetic alterations in the rat, a species which is yet unaccessible for such studies
due to the lack of germline-competent embryonic stem cells. The present study was performed to examine the developmental ability
of reconstructed rat embryos after transfer of nuclei from early preimplantation stages. We observed that single blastomeres
from two-cell embryos and zygotes reconstructed by pronuclei exchange can develop in vitro until morula/blastocyst stage.
When karyoplasts from blastomeres were used for the reconstruction of embryos, highest in vitro cleavage rates were obtained
with nuclei in an early phase of the cell cycle transferred into enucleated preactivated oocytes or zygotes. However, further
in vitro development of reconstructed embryos produced from blastomere nuclei was arrested at early cleavage stages under
all conditions tested in this study. In contrast, immediate transfer to foster mothers of reconstructed embryos with nuclei
from two-cell embryos at an early stage of the cell cycle in preactivated enucleated oocytes resulted in live newborn rats,
with a general efficiency of 0.4%â2.2%. The genetic origin of the cloned offspring was verified by using donor nuclei from
embryos of Black Hooded Wistar rats and transgenic rats carrying an ubiquitously expressed green fluorescent protein transgene.
Thus, we report for the first time the production of live cloned rats using nuclei from two-cell embryos.
Abstract
Rats have been cloned by transfer of two-stage nuclei into parthenogenetically preactivated enucleated oocytes |
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ISSN: | 0006-3363 1529-7268 |
DOI: | 10.1095/biolreprod.106.053330 |