Freeze-Dried Sperm Fertilization Leads to Full-Term Development in Rabbits

To date, the laboratory mouse is the only mammal in which freeze-dried spermatozoa have been shown to support full-term development after microinjection into oocytes. Because spermatozoa in mice, unlike in most other mammals, do not contribute centrosomes to zygotes, it is still unknown whether free...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biology of reproduction 2004-06, Vol.70 (6), p.1776-1781
Hauptverfasser: LIU, Ji-Long, KUSAKABE, Hirokazu, XIANGZHONG YANG, CHANG, Ching-Chien, SUZUKI, Hiroyuki, SCHMIDT, David W, JULIAN, Marina, PFEFFER, Robert, BORMANN, Charles L, TIAN, X. Cindy, YANAGIMACHI, Ryuzo
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container_end_page 1781
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1776
container_title Biology of reproduction
container_volume 70
creator LIU, Ji-Long
KUSAKABE, Hirokazu
XIANGZHONG YANG
CHANG, Ching-Chien
SUZUKI, Hiroyuki
SCHMIDT, David W
JULIAN, Marina
PFEFFER, Robert
BORMANN, Charles L
TIAN, X. Cindy
YANAGIMACHI, Ryuzo
description To date, the laboratory mouse is the only mammal in which freeze-dried spermatozoa have been shown to support full-term development after microinjection into oocytes. Because spermatozoa in mice, unlike in most other mammals, do not contribute centrosomes to zygotes, it is still unknown whether freeze-dried spermatozoa in other mammals are fertile. Rabbit sperm was selected as a model because of its similarity to human sperm (considering the centrosome inheritance pattern). Freeze- drying induces rabbit spermatozoa to undergo dramatic changes, such as immobilization, membrane breaking, and tail fragmentation. Even when considered to be “dead” in the conventional sense, rabbit spermatozoa freeze-dried and stored at ambient temperature for more than 2 yr still have capability comparable to that of fresh spermatozoa to support preimplantation development after injection into oocytes followed by activation. A rabbit kit derived from a freeze-dried spermatozoon was born after transferring 230 sperm-injected oocytes into eight recipients. The results suggest that freeze-drying could be applied to preserve the spermatozoa from most other species, including human. The present study also raises the question of whether rabbit sperm centrosomes survive freeze-drying or are not essential for embryonic development.
doi_str_mv 10.1095/biolreprod.103.025957
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subjects Animals
Biological and medical sciences
Embryo Transfer
Embryonic Development
Female
Freeze Drying
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Male
Mammalian male genital system
Mice
Microscopy, Confocal
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
Models, Animal
Morphology. Physiology
Oocytes - drug effects
Oocytes - growth & development
Pregnancy
Rabbits
Semen Preservation - methods
Sperm Injections, Intracytoplasmic
Spermatozoa - ultrastructure
Vertebrates: reproduction
title Freeze-Dried Sperm Fertilization Leads to Full-Term Development in Rabbits
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