Sperm mediated gene transfer in pigs Effect of exogenous DNA presence in seminal quality and evaluation of in vivo transgenic embryo production

An alternative technology for producing transgenic animals is sperm mediated gene transfer (SMGT), based on the ability of sperm cells to bind and internalize exogenous DNA. The aims of this work were 1) evaluate the effects of the presence of exogenous DNA in the seminal quality and 2) evaluate the efficiency of transgenic embryos production by surgery artificial insemination using sperm mediated gene transfer technique. Fresh spermatozoa (removed seminal plasma) were incubated with DNA (EGFP) at 16°C for 2 h (108 cells/mL and 5 μg DNA/mL). At first motility, progressive motility and viability were evaluated in spermatozoa incubated with or without exogenous DNA. The results showed that the presence of the DNA did not affect any of the studied sperm parameters (motility, progressive motility and viability). On the other hand insemination was carried out in 4 gilts by laparotomy in utero tubaric junction. Six-seven days after insemination blastocysts were collected and fertilization rate and transgene expression were determined. The mean number of corpora lutea/gilt was 10.50 ± 2.90 with a mean recovery rate of 11.90%. After the surgery, a total of 5 embryos were recovered and the percentage of normally developed embryos was 100% and with a high quality (two of them had more than 400 cells). When the blastocysts recovered after 6-7 days post-insemination were analyzed by fluorescence microscopy, it was revealed that none of them expressed protein EGFP. These results show the possibility that exogenous DNA bound to the sperm with low viability and only a low percentage to viable sperm, so the probability that live sperm bind the DNA and are able to fertilize in comparison with live sperm without the transgene are really low.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: García-Vázquez, F. A., Ruiz, S., Grullón, L. A., de Ondiz, A., Gutiérrez-Adán, A., Gadea, J.
Format: journal article biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/1654
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