Topic:Assisted Reproductive Techniques
Assisted Reproductive Techniques (ART) in horses encompass a range of technologies designed to aid in the breeding process. These techniques include artificial insemination, embryo transfer, intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), and oocyte transfer. ART is employed to enhance reproductive efficiency, manage genetic diversity, and support breeding programs for both commercial and conservation purposes. Artificial insemination involves the collection and deposition of semen into the mare's reproductive tract, while embryo transfer entails the collection of a fertilized embryo from a donor mare and its implantation into a recipient mare. ICSI involves the direct injection of a single sperm into an oocyte to achieve fertilization. Oocyte transfer involves the transfer of an oocyte from one mare to another for fertilization and gestation. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that examine the methodologies, advancements, and applications of assisted reproductive techniques in equine reproduction.
In vitro and xenogenous capacitation-like changes of fresh, cooled, and cryopreserved stallion sperm as assessed by a chlortetracycline stain. Like the human female, the mare experiences reproductive tract pathology that may sometimes be circumvented by the use of assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). One such technology, gamete intrafallopian transfer (GIFT), may be used in mares that exhibit ovulatory, oviductal, or uterine abnormalities that limit the use of common ARTs, such as embryo transfer. Homologous GIFT has been successfully performed in the horse; however, the logistics, costs, and associated risks of surgically transferring gametes to the oviducts of a recipient mare are considerably high. Use of a less costly speci...
Method for isolating preantral follicles from mare ovaries. The aims of this study were to evaluate the use of collagenase treatment to isolate preantral follicles from mare ovaries and to assess the effect of this treatment on follicular morphology. Intact mare ovaries were chopped into pieces, incubated individually with 1, 3 or 5 mg collagenase (type 1A) ml(-1) in a shaking waterbath at 37 degrees C for up to 2 h and passed through a series of stainless steel filters with pore size 50-300 microm to remove large clumps and stromal cells. The samples were prepared for histological analysis and sections were examined by light microscopy. Isolated folli...
Repeated follicle aspiration in mares: consequences for follicle growth and oocyte quality. Cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) recovered from ovaries of mares killed at abattoirs or after in vivo collection have heterogeneous morphologies and meiotic competence as follicles of variable quality are used. It is thought that it should be possible to recover more uniform COCs, with respect to morphology and nuclear maturation, by repeated follicle aspiration. Therefore, the influence of repeated follicle aspiration on the number and diameter of follicles > or =5 mm in diameter, the morphology and recovery rate of COCs, and the chromatin configuration in oocytes was investigated. Repeated...
Pregnancies produced from fertile and infertile stallions by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) of single frozen-thawed spermatozoa into in vivo matured mare oocytes. The use of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) for in vitro fertilization of equine oocytes and the developmental potential of these oocytes after transfer to the Fallopian tubes of synchronized mares were examined. Oocytes were aspirated from mature follicles 39 h after injection of a GnRH analogue and transported 190 km at 39 degrees C. Semen from a fertile and an infertile stallion was frozen and prepared for injection. Successfully injected oocytes were transferred surgically into the ampulla of the Fallopian tube either: (i) 4-8 h after semen injection; or (ii) after 24-48 h culture b...
Effect of timing of follicle aspiration on pregnancy rate after oocyte transfer in mares. Mares with preovulatory follicles >33 mm in diameter were administered hCG and were randomly assigned for aspiration of the dominant follicle at 24 h or 35 h after hCG administration. Oocytes recovered at 24 h were cultured for 12 h before transfer and oocytes recovered at 35 h were cultured for 1 h. Oocytes were transferred by flank laparotomy to the oviduct of the same mare, or to the oviduct of another oocyte donor. Recipient mares were inseminated before and after transfer. The oocyte recovery rates at 24 h and 35 h after hCG administration were not significantly different (10/15 (66%) and...
Indirect determination of stallion sperm capacitation based on esterase release from spermatozoa challenged with lysophosphatidylcholine. A spectrophotometric assay was developed to measure the amount of esterase released from stallion spermatozoa. This assay was used to determine the percentages of capacitated stallion spermatozoa, determined by the ability of spermatozoa to undergo an acrosome reaction and release esterase in response to a lysophosphatidylcholine challenge, for spermatozoa incubated under conditions to increase intracellular calcium and cAMP. Incubation with 100 nmol calcium ionophore A23187 l(-1) induced 66% of stallion spermatozoa to capacitate after 60 min of incubation at 37 degrees C. Subsequent experimen...
Effects of follicular fluid or progesterone on in vitro maturation of equine oocytes before intracytoplasmic sperm injection with non-sorted and sex-sorted spermatozoa. In Expt 1, compact cumulus oocyte complexes (COCs) were matured in: (i) control medium (Hepes-buffered TCM-199 with 10% oestrous cow serum (OCS) + oestradiol, LH and FSH); (ii) Hepes-buffered TCM-199 with 20% follicular fluid; or (iii) control medium containing 250 ng progesterone ml(-1). Mature oocytes were collected by transvaginal aspiration as a positive control for the in vitro maturation (IVM) treatments. Oocytes were fertilized by ICSI and cultured in Menezo's B2 + 5% fetal calf serum (FCS). There were no significant differences among IVM treatments. In Expt 2, oocytes with expanded COC...
Production of live foals from sperm-injected oocytes harvested from pregnant mares. In vitro fertilization in horses has been less successful than anticipated owing to: (i) the inability to collect large numbers of good quality oocytes; (ii) alterations in the zona pellucida that occur during in vitro maturation of equine oocytes; and (iii) inadequate preparation of equine sperm cells. In addition, studies in humans, mice and cattle have indicated that high concentrations of glucose in culture media may inhibit embryonic development in vitro and this may also be a problem for development of equine embryos in vitro. The aims of the present study were: (i) to achieve fertilizat...
Effects of fetuin on zona pellucida hardening and fertilizability of equine oocytes matured in vitro. In vitro fertilization (IVF) has had poor success in the horse, a situation related to low rates of sperm penetration through the zona pellucida (ZP). Zona pellucida hardening (ZPH) is seen in mouse and rat oocytes cultured in serum-free medium. The hardened ZP is refractory to sperm penetration. Fetuin, a component of fetal calf serum, inhibits ZPH and allows normal fertilization rates in oocytes cultured in the absence of serum. We evaluated whether fetuin is present in horse serum and follicular fluid (FF) and whether fetuin could inhibit ZPH in equine oocytes matured in vitro, thus increas...
Caesarean section and other methods for assisted delivery: comparison of effects on mare mortality and complications. Data from 116 mares that had caesarean section or vaginal delivery at 2 university hospitals were analysed in 5 groups, as follows: dystocia corrected by caesarean section, Group DCS (n = 48); elective caesarean section, Group ECS (n = 10); caesarean section concurrently with colic surgery, Group CCS (n = 8); assisted vaginal delivery, Group AVD (n = 22); and controlled vaginal delivery under general anaesthesia, Group CVD (n = 28). Survival rate in all mares that had caesarean section, excluding Group CCS, was 88% (51/58). All mares in Group ECS survived and Group CCS had the lowest survival ...
Effects of bovine serum albumin on function of cryopreserved stallion spermatozoa during medium culture and uterine tube epithelial cell coculture. To compare function of cultured cryopreserved stallion spermatozoa in a modified Tyrode's medium (TM), with or without bovine serum albumin (BSA), or in uterine tube (oviduct) epithelial cell (OEC) coculture in TM, with or without BSA. Methods: Cryopreserved spermatozoa from 6 proven stallions and OEC from bovine reproductive tracts in follicular phase. Methods: Thawed spermatozoa were cultured in TM, with or without BSA, or cocultured with OEC monolayers in TM, with or without BSA. Percentages of capacitated and acrosome-reacted spermatozoa were measured at 5 hours for TM cultures. Spermatozo...
Transfer of immature oocytes to a preovulatory follicle: an alternative to in vitro maturation in the mare? In the mare, success rates for the in vitro maturation of oocytes are low. Accordingly, we attempted to determine if immature oocytes could be matured in vivo by injecting them into a preovulatory follicle. Groups of 3-9 oocytes collected from donor mares were transferred under ultrasound control into the preovulatory follicle of a recipient mare that was treated with crude equine pituitary gonadotrophin (CEG) to induce ovulation. Just before ovulation (34 h post treatment) the preovulatory follicle of the recipient mare was punctured to collect both the transferred and the indigenous oocytes ...
Cryopreservation procedures for Day 7-8 equine embryos. Larger grade 1 or 2 (1 = excellent,.... 4 = degenerate) equine embryos that ranged in diameter from 300 to 680 microm and were recovered from mares on Day 7 or 8 after ovulation, were randomly assigned to 3 widely divergent cryopreservation treatments. Treatment 1 consisted of cooling from -6 degrees C to -35 degrees C at 0.5 degrees C per min followed by plunging into liquid nitrogen, with a one-step addition and a 4-step removal of 1.0 M glycerol. Treatment 2 (step-down equilibration) consisted of a 2-step addition of glycerol to 4.0 M followed by a decrease to 2.0 M prior to freezing, with ...
Comparison of different methods for the recovery of horse oocytes. The object of this study was to compare 4 different methods of oocyte recovery from mares; 1) transvaginal follicle aspiration in vivo; 2) follicle aspiration in vitro; 3) oocyte recovery by isolation of follicles in vitro and 4) follicle scraping in vitro. Oocyte recovery was highest after follicle scraping (71.1%) and follicle isolation and rupture (61.3%). Follicle aspiration in vitro and in vivo yielded oocytes on 31.2% and 19.3% of occasions, respectively. The output of different types of cumulus-oocyte-complexes was different among the methods; the portion of compact cumulus-oocyte-compl...
Success rates when attempting to nonsurgically collect equine embryos at 144, 156 or 168 hours after ovulation. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the exact age when the equine embryo reaches the uterus. The time of ovulation was determined by hourly ultrasound examinations starting 32 h after an injection of crude equine pituitary gonadotrophin or human chorionic gonadotrophin, or after the first of 4 injections of buserelin. Nonsurgical uterine flushings were carried out 144 h (Day 6), 156 h (Day 6.5) or 168 h (Day 7) after ovulation. Induction of ovulation was attempted in 101 oestrous cycles and 61 of 101 mares (60.4%) ovulated 32-44 h post injection. Sixty embryo collections were performed w...
Effects of follicular aspiration and flushing, and the genotype of the fetus on circulating progesterone levels during pregnancy in the mare. When aspirating ovarian follicles in pregnant mares to obtain oocytes for in vitro fertilisation (IVF), the effect of the manipulation on circulating concentrations of progesterone may be an important consideration in terms of the maintenance of pregnancy. The object of this study was to compare the effects of 3 different forms of transvaginal ultrasound-guided follicle aspiration (Treatment 1, no aspiration, n = 4; Treatment 2, aspirate only follicles > or =20 mm in diameter, n = 7; Treatment 3, aspirate all visible follicles, n = 7) on peripheral plasma progesterone concentrations between Da...
Chorionic gonadotropin secretion is associated with an inhibition of follicular growth and an improvement in oocyte competence for in vitro maturation in the mare. This study reports the follicular growth and oocyte competence for in vitro maturation and fertilization under the influence of circulating eCG. Three to 7 successive ultrasound-guided follicular punctures were performed on 4 pregnant mares from Day 23 until Day 75 of pregnancy and on 5 control mares whose embryonic vesicle was crushed on Day 22. All follicles larger than 5 mm were punctured 24 h after the largest follicle reached 18 mm. Expanded cumulus oocyte complexes (COCs) were stained at recovery to analyze the nuclear stage. Compact COCs were cultured in vitro for 46 h and either staine...
Intracytoplasmic sperm injection of in vitro-matured equine oocytes. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) was performed on equine oocytes matured in vitro. The oocytes were aspirated from abattoir ovaries and matured in vitro for 36 h at 38 degrees C. ICSI was performed using frozen/thawed stallion semen after swimup in medium containing human serum albumin. Sperm-injected oocytes were either 1) cultured in vitro for 10, 20, or 72 h; 2) transferred to oviducts of pseudopregnant mice; or 3) transferred to a synchronized mare after initial in vitro culture. The transferred ova were recovered after 72 h, and all ova were subsequently fixed, stained, and process...
[Separation techniques ro achieve vital and reproduction competent equine spermatozoa populations–a survey]. Equine ejaculates are significantly characterized by widely varying parameters especially in those of practical relevance for equine Al. Therefore it is of interest for practical purposes to get subpopulations of concentrated, vital, and competent spermatozoa from the origin ejaculates. Special preparation of the donor stallions will stabilize sperm output. Fractionated semen collection from stallions supplies sperm enriched seminal fractions very useful to work with further in semen preservation. Most important to achieve a concentrated sperm subpopulation are semen manipulations post ejacula...
Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) versus conventional IVF on abattoir-derived and in vitro-matured equine oocytes. Conventional IVF as well as several assisted microfertilization techniques have shown limited success in the horse. After recent positive results achieved with intracytoplasmic injection of a single spermatozoon (ICSI) in human IVF, we chose to try the method in the horse. We compared conventional IVF to ICSI by fertilization rates of oocytes with compact and expanded cumuli and by developmental potential of the resulting embryos. Cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) were obtained by aspirating the follicular fluid from the ovaries of slaughtered mares. Complexes showing complete cumulus investment...
Membrane contact with oviductal epithelium modulates the intracellular calcium concentration of equine spermatozoa in vitro. Interaction of equine spermatozoa with oviductal epithelial cells (OEC) prolongs sperm viability and maintains low intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) in spermatozoa. Experiments were designed to investigate 1) whether release of spermatozoa from OEC in vitro is associated with elevated [Ca2+]i and 2) whether soluble products from OEC or direct membrane contact between spermatozoa and OEC mediates the effects of OEC on sperm [Ca2+]i. In the first experiment, changes in [Ca2+]i in spermatozoa loaded with indo-1 acetoxymethylester were determined in motile spermatozoa released from OEC...
Direct transfer of equine blastocysts frozen-thawed in the presence of ethylene glycol and sucrose. The present study was designed to examine the suitability of ethylene glycol as a cryoprotectant for equine embryos. Blastocysts recovered nonsurgically from Day 6 donor mares were cryopreserved by conventional 2-step freezing in the presence of 10% ethylene glycol (EG), 10% glycerol (Gly), or 10% ethylene glycol + 0.1M sucrose (EG + Suc). After thawing, the EG and Gly were removed by a 6-step manner, and the EG + Suc was diluted to one fourth in the freezing straw. The postthaw blastocysts were transferred nonsurgically into the uteri of recipient mares on Days 4 to 7 after ovulation. Pregnan...
[Detection of chlamydiae in animal and human semen using direct immunofluorescence]. Frequency of elementary and reticular chlamydial bodies was investigated by direct immunofluorescence tests in ejaculates collected from 52 men, 60 stallions, 42 bulls, and 66 boars using the kits of Progen Biotechnic GmbH and the microscope Labophot-2 Nikon. At the same time, qualitative semen tests, including ejaculate volume, sperm motility, percentage of live and dead sperms and morphological' analyses (Vĕzník and Svecová, 1992) were done. Repeatability of the findings was checked in a group of nine bulls housed at the institute and sampled at weekly intervals for 3 to 4 months (Tab. 1)...
Methods for induction of capacitation and the acrosome reaction of stallion spermatozoa. Methodologies to capacitate bovine spermatozoa, induce the acrosome reaction, and fertilize bovine oocytes in vitro have been established. The capability to do the same with stallion spermatozoa, however, is not available. Several different methods have been used to capacitate stallion spermatozoa with variable results. More basic research needs to be done to establish in vitro conditions necessary to capacitate and induce an acrosome reaction in stallion spermatozoa. Although much progress can be expected in this area, it is unlikely that the general practitioner will use these technologies i...
Superovulation. Development of a superovulation technique that is successful, safe, and commercially available would revolutionize the equine breeding industry. However, the reality is that ovulation rates for mares following existing superovulatory treatment are much lower than for cattle. This dichotomy has been attributed to the relatively limited area available in the ovulation fossa for ovulation to occur, combined with the large size of the equine preovulatory follicle. In addition, the number of ovulations in the mare may be limited physiologically by the size of the follicular cohort that may be rescu...
Transvaginal aspiration. This article describes in detail the procedures for collection of equine oocytes using a transvaginal ultrasound probe. Success in obtaining oocytes from humans, bovines, and horses are presented. The effect of repeated follicular aspiration of both cattle and horses is reviewed.
Early embryonic development and evaluation of equine embryo viability. Tremendous progress has been made in the development of assisted reproductive techniques that may enhance the reproductive efficiency of the horse. However, techniques that involve the manipulation of oocytes and/or embryos may themselves be detrimental to embryo viability and subsequent development. Therefore, an objective method of assessing viability of embryos before and/or after oocyte/embryo manipulation is desirable. At this time, morphologic evaluation is the most widely used method of determining the viability of equine embryos. Although morphologic assessment of embryo quality will n...