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Parthenogenetic activation of bovine oocytes using single and combined strontium, ionomycin and 6-dimethylaminopurine treatments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 2007

S.C. Méo*
Affiliation:
Centro de Genética e Reprodução Animal, Instituto de Zootecnia, Rua Heitor Penteado, 56, 13460-000, Nova Odessa, SP, Brazil. Departamento de Medicina Veterinária Preventiva e Reprodução Animal, FCAV – UNESP, Via de Acesso Prof. Paulo Donato Castellane, s/n, 14884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil.
W. Yamazaki
Affiliation:
Departamento de Medicina Veterinária Preventiva e Reprodução Animal, FCAV – UNESP, Via de Acesso Prof. Paulo Donato Castellane, s/n, 14884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil.
C.R. Ferreira
Affiliation:
Departamento de Medicina Veterinária Preventiva e Reprodução Animal, FCAV – UNESP, Via de Acesso Prof. Paulo Donato Castellane, s/n, 14884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil.
F. Perecin
Affiliation:
Departamento de Medicina Veterinária Preventiva e Reprodução Animal, FCAV – UNESP, Via de Acesso Prof. Paulo Donato Castellane, s/n, 14884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil.
N.Z. Saraiva
Affiliation:
Departamento de Medicina Veterinária Preventiva e Reprodução Animal, FCAV – UNESP, Via de Acesso Prof. Paulo Donato Castellane, s/n, 14884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil.
C.L.V. Leal
Affiliation:
Departamento de Ciências Básicas, FZEA – USP, Avenida Duque de Caxias Norte, 225, 13635-900, Pirassununga, SP, Brazil.
J.M. Garcia
Affiliation:
Departamento de Medicina Veterinária Preventiva e Reprodução Animal, FCAV – UNESP, Via de Acesso Prof. Paulo Donato Castellane, s/n, 14884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil.
*
All correspondence to: S.C. Méo, Embrapa Pecuária Sudeste, Rodovia Washington Luiz, km 234, CEP 13560-970, São Carlos, SP, Brazil. Tel: +55 16 3361 5611. Fax: +55 16 3361 5754. e-mail: simone@cppse.embrapa.br
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Summary

In vitro-matured (IVM) bovine oocytes were activated with single and combined treatments of strontium (S), ionomycin (I) and 6-DMAP (D). Using oocytes IVM for 26 h, we observed that activation altered cell cycle kinetics (faster progression, MIII arrest, or direct transition from MII to pronuclear stage) when compared to in vitro fertilization. The effect of oocyte age on early parthenogenesis was assessed in oocytes IVM for 22, 26 and 30 h. Better results in pronuclear development were obtained in treatments ISD (81.7%) at 22 h; D (66.7%), IS (63.3%), ID (73.3%) and ISD (76.7%) at 26 h; and D (86.7%), IS (85.0%) and ID (78.3%) at 30 h. Higher cleavage occurred on ISD (80.0%) at 22 h; ID (83.3%) and ISD (91.7%) at 26 h; and I (86.7%), IS (90.0%), ID (85.0%) and ISD (95.0%) at 30 h. More blastocysts were achieved in ID (25.0%) and ISD (18.3%) at 22 h; and in ID at 26 h (45.0%) and 30 h (50.0%). We also observed that IS allowed higher haploid (77.4%) embryonic development, whilst ID was better for diploid (89.1%) development. It was concluded that association of S and D without I was not effective for blastocyst development; treatments using S were less influenced by oocyte age, but when S was associated with D there was a detrimental effect on aged oocytes; treatment ISD promoted higher activation and cleavage rates in young oocytes and ID protocol was the best for producing blastocysts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2007

Introduction

Study and improvement of artificial activation techniques are required in several embryo biotechnologies. Activation is a key step for procedures such as somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT; Wells et al., Reference Wells, Misica and Tervit1999), intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI; Suttner et al., Reference Suttner, Zakhartchenko, Stojkovic, Müller, Alberio, Medjugorac, Brem, Wolf and Stojkovic2000) and round-spermatid injection (ROSI; Loren & Lacham-Kaplan, Reference Loren and Lacham-Kaplan2006). Furthermore, activation is used for elucidation of events during early embryonic development (Soloy et al., Reference Soloy, Kanka, Viuff, Smith, Callesen and Greve1997) and for studies on genomic imprinting (Solter, Reference Solter1988).

Ovulated or in vitro-matured bovine oocytes are arrested in metaphase II (MII) until activation by spermatozoa or by an artificial stimulus. This cell cycle arrest occurs mainly due to the persistence of high activity of maturation promoting factor (MPF) and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases (Dupont, Reference Dupont1998). When a spermatozoon activates an oocyte, it promotes multiple and periodic oscillations of intracellular free calcium ([Ca2+]i; Yang et al., Reference Yang, Presicce, Moraghan, Jiang and Foote1994), which are mediated by receptors and second messengers after membrane interaction between gametes and by the release of a soluble sperm factor (Malcuit et al., Reference Malcuit, Maserati, Takahashi, Page and Fissore2006). Oscillations on [Ca2+]i are necessary for meiosis resumption, pronuclear formation, mitotic cleavage and embryo development (Küpker et al., Reference Küpker, Diedrich and Edwards1998).

An artificial activation treatment is considered efficient when it achieves all physiological steps of activation. This can be more easily obtained by the use of aged oocytes (Kikuchi et al., Reference Kikuchi, Izaike, Noguchi, Furukawa, Daen, Naito and Toyoda1995), by the promotion of multiple intracellular calcium pulses (Vitullo & Ozil, Reference Vitullo and Ozil1992), or by the combination of different activation treatments (Yang et al., Reference Yang, Presicce, Moraghan, Jiang and Foote1994; Liu et al., Reference Liu, Ju and Yang1998). Activation agents act in distinct pathways, some provoke [Ca2+]i increase in one pulse, e.g. ionomycin and ethanol (Loi et al., Reference Loi, Ledda, Fulka Jr, Cappai and Moor1998), or in multiple pulses, e.g. strontium (Cuthbertson et al., Reference Cuthbertson, Whittingham and Cobbold1981), while others promote inhibition of protein synthesis, e.g. cycloheximide (Nussbaum & Prather, Reference Nussbaum and Prather1995), or protein phosphorylation, e.g. 6-DMAP (Susko-Parrish et al., Reference Susko-Parrish, Leibfried-Rutledge, Northey, Schutzkus and First1994). Since artificial treatments are not able to mimic all events promoted by the sperm cell (Nakada & Mizuno, Reference Nakada and Mizuno1998) and obtaining efficiently activated young oocytes constitutes one of the limiting steps for the success of SCNT (Kishikawa et al., Reference Kishikawa, Wakayama and Yanagimachi1999), better comprehension of activation dynamics may benefit several technologies.

In our previous works, activation potential of strontium was evaluated in bovine oocytes (Méo et al., Reference Méo, Leal and Garcia2004). Strontium showed similar pronuclear, cleavage and blastocyst development rates compared to ethanol, but it increased total cell number in blastocysts (Méo et al., Reference Méo, Leal and Garcia2004). However, neither strontium and ethanol individually, nor the association of both were efficient to produce parthenogenetic blastocysts. Afterwards, aiming to improve activation and blastocyst development, we evaluated the influence of Ca2+ and Mg2+ in activation medium and tested several strontium concentrations and periods of incubation. The optimal strontium protocol achieved for bovine oocyte activation was 20 mM SrCl2 for 6 h in Ca2+- and Mg2+-free TALP (Méo et al., Reference Méo, Yamazaki, Leal, Oliveira and Garcia2005). This protocol was also employed to produce a live calf by SCNT (Yamazaki et al., Reference Yamazaki, Ferreira, Méo, Leal, Meirelles and Garcia2005).

We observed that strontium treatment was less influenced by oocyte age and that the combination of strontium and ionomycin did not improve developmental rates (Méo et al., Reference Méo, Yamazaki, Leal, Oliveira and Garcia2005). Then, since 6-DMAP is an unspecific phosphorylation inhibitor (Loi et al., Reference Loi, Ledda, Fulka Jr, Cappai and Moor1998) that is broadly used for activation, while strontium is considered an artificial treatment more similar to fertilization (Bos-Mikich et al., Reference Bos-Mikich, Wood, Candy and Whittingham1995), in the present study, we evaluated single and associated strontium, ionomycin and 6-DMAP treatments to activate oocytes in three maturational ages. During early events of embryonic development, activated zygotes were compared to in vitro fertilized ones. Activation treatments were also assessed for pronuclear development and status, cleavage and blastocyst development and quality. The objectives were: (1) to compare nuclear dynamics in activated and fertilized oocytes; (2) to verify the possibilities of combining strontium and 6-DMAP; (3) to develop an artificial treatment not influenced by oocyte age in a great extent; and (4) to establish a reliable treatment for further application in different experimental designs involving artificial activation.

Materials and Methods

Chemicals and media were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co., unless otherwise stated. Incubator conditions for oocytes and embryos during all experimentation were at 38.8 °C under 5% CO2 in air and maximum humidity.

Oocyte recovery and in vitro maturation (IVM)

Abattoir-derived ovaries were transported to the laboratory in saline solution at 28–32 °C and follicles from 3–7 mm of diameter were aspirated using an 18-gauge needle attached to a 20 ml syringe. Oocytes with at least four layers of cumulus cells were selected. The oocytes were matured in tissue culture medium (TCM-199, GIBCO BRL) supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated (55 °C for 30 min) fetal calf serum (FCS), 0.5 μg/ml FSH (Folltropin; Bioniche Animal Health), 100 IU/ml hCG (Profasi, Serono), 1.0 μg/ml estradiol, 0.25 mM sodium pyruvate and 75 μg/ml kanamycin (GIBCO). IVM was performed in 100 μl droplets with 10–20 oocytes/per drop under mineral oil (Dow Corning Co.) for 22 to 30 h.

Activation treatments

After IVM for 20 h, oocytes were stripped from cumulus cells with 0.2% hyaluronidase in calcium-free PBS with 0.1% polyvinyl alcohol for 5 min and then gentle pipetting for 3 to 5 min. Oocytes with homogeneous cytoplasm and an extruded first polar body (1PB) were selected and remained in maturation droplets until activation procedures at 22, 26 or 30 h. The oocytes were washed three times in HEPES-buffered TCM-199 (H199) with 3 mg/ml BSA (fraction V, fatty acid free; Inlab) before and immediately after the activation treatment.

Oocytes were randomly allocated and cultured in one of the following groups: (1) control (C): culture in synthetic oviductal fluid (SOF) supplemented with 2.5% FCS and 5 mg/ml BSA in the absence of any activating agent; (2) strontium (S): culture in 20 mM SrCl2 in Ca2+- and Mg2+-free TALP for 6 h; (3) ionomycin (I): culture in 5 μM ionomycin in H199 (1 mg/ml BSA) for 5 min at room temperature and further wash in H199 (30 mg/ml BSA) for 5 min; (4) 6-DMAP (D): culture in 2 mM 6-dimethylaminopurine for 4 h in Ca2+- and Mg2+-free TALP with osmolarity corrected to 280–290 mOsm; (5) ionomycin + strontium (IS): oocytes submitted to treatment I, as described above, followed immediately by treatment S; (6) ionomycin + 6-DMAP (ID): oocytes submitted to treatment I, followed immediately by treatment D; (7) ionomycin + strontium + 6-DMAP (ISD): oocytes submitted to treatment I, followed by treatments S and D; and (8) strontium + 6-DMAP (SD): oocytes submitted to treatments S and D. For ISD and SD, the treatments S and D were handled in the following manner: treatment S alone for 2 h, then combined to treatment D for 4 h, meaning a total of 6 h for S and 4 h for D. In ISD and SD treatments, since cultures in strontium and 6-DMAP were simultaneously performed, the medium of choice was the Ca2+- and Mg2+-free TALP previously optimized for strontium (Méo et al., Reference Méo, Yamazaki, Leal, Oliveira and Garcia2005). All treatments were replicated two times for immunofluorescence evaluation of tubulin and chromatin and five times for pronuclear development, cleavage and blastocyst development assessment.

In vitro fertilization (IVF)

In vitro fertilization was performed 24 h after IVM. Frozen semen was thawed in a 35 °C water bath for 30 s. The semen was separated by centrifugation in Percoll (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) gradient (45 and 90%) at 900 g for 30 min. The obtained pellet, evaluated for concentration and sperm motility, was diluted in TALP with 10 μg/ml heparin and PHE (18 μM penicillamine, 10 μM hypotaurine and 1.8 μM epinephrine) and inseminated at a final concentration of 1 × 106 viable sperm/ml. The sperm was co-incubated with IVM oocytes in 100 μl droplets of TALP under mineral oil. The zygotes obtained by IVF were used as control (IVF-Control) of the activated oocytes assessed for nuclear and microtubular dynamics by immunofluorescent evaluation of tubulin and chromatin.

In vitro culture

At the end of the activation treatment, oocytes were transferred to droplets (100 μl) of SOF and cultured under mineral oil until activation assessment. Oocytes activated in the absence of 6-DMAP and designed for cleavage and blastocyst development were incubated in SOF supplemented with cytochalasin B (10 μg/ml) for 6 h in treatments C, I (immediately after the treatment with ionomycin), S and IS (simultaneously to the incubation with strontium). Cytochalasin was used to avoid second polar body (2PB) emission and to promote diploid embryonic development. Next, embryos were transferred to cytochalasin-free SOF.

Immunofluorescent evaluation of tubulin and chromatin

Oocytes fertilized after 24 h IVM were compared with oocytes activated after 26 h IVM. Since activation takes place immediately after the chemical treatment while the spermatozoon took about 4 h postinsemination (h.p.i.) to penetrate the oocyte (data not shown), we standardized 0 h as the onset of activation (e.g. the beginning of artificial treatment or 4 h.p.i.). The protocol used was described by Liu et al. (Reference Liu, Ju and Yang1998). Briefly, oocytes were incubated for 30 min in microtubule-stabilizing buffer (0.1M PIPES, pH 6.9; 5 mM MgCl2·6H2O (Merck); 2.5 mM EGTA) containing 2% paraformaldehyde, 0.1% Triton X-100, 1 μM taxol, 0.01% aprotinin, 1 mM dithiothreitol and 50% deuterium oxide (Aldrich Chem. Co.). Afterwards, oocytes were blocked overnight in wash medium (WM; 0.02% NaN3, 0.01% Triton X-100, 0.2% non-fat dry milk, 2% FCS, 2% BSA and 0.1 M glycine in PBS) and then incubated with FITC-conjugated α-tubulin mouse monoclonal antibody diluted to 1:50 in WM for 2 h. After passage in WM, oocytes were stained for nuclear DNA visualization with 10 μg/ml Hoechst 33342 in WM for 10 min, mounted on slides with 90% glycerol in PBS and observed under an epifluorescence microscope (330–385 nm and 420–490 nm). Oocytes were classified as metaphase II (MII), transition MII/pronucleus (MII/PN), metaphase III (MIII), anaphase or telophase II (A/T) and pronuclear (PN) stages.

Pronuclear development and status, cleavage and blastocyst development and quality

After 15 to 16 h of the activation treatment, oocytes were stained with 10 μg/ml Hoechst 33342 in H199 for 10 min, visualized under an epifluorescence microscope (330–385 nm) and assessed for nuclear progression. Oocytes harbouring pronucleus were considered activated.

In pronuclear zygotes obtained from activated oocytes previously IVM for 26 h, the number of pronuclei (PN) and polar bodies (PB) was also observed. Despite the initial equivalent number of oocytes in each treatment, pronuclear development rates were different, causing variation on the number of zygotes assessed for pronuclear status.

Cleavage was assessed 46 to 48 h after activation treatments under a stereoscopic microscope and 2- and 4-cell embryos were considered cleaved.

Blastocyst development rates and blastocyst quality were observed on day 7 after activation. The proportion of oocytes that achieved the blastocyst stage was determined.

Differential staining of inner cell mass (ICM) and trophectoderm (TE) cells of expanded blastocysts (Bos-Mikich et al., Reference Bos-Mikich, Whittingham and Jones1997) was used to evaluate embryo quality. Zona pellucida of expanded blastocysts was removed by incubation in 0.5% pronase in PBS for 1–1.5 min. After washing three times in H199 supplemented with 10% FCS and once in H199, embryos were incubated in 10 mM picric acid (Reagen, Quimibras Industrias) and 3 mg/ml PVP in PBS for 10 min over ice. Then, embryos were washed in H199 and exposed for 40 min to heat-inactivated rabbit anti-bovine spleen cell antiserum diluted 1:5 in H199. Later, embryos were washed in H199 + 10% FCS and transferred to a 1:5 dilution of guinea pig complement in H199 containing 10 μg/ml propidium iodide and 10 μg/ml Hoechst 33342 for 40 min. Labelled blastocysts were washed in PBS with 0.3% BSA, mounted on slides with glycerol and examined by epifluorescence microscopy (330–385 nm). Blue and red colours were designated as ICM and TE cells, respectively. Mean (±SD) total, ICM and TE cell number in blastocysts and ICM/total cell ratio were determined. Since the number of treated oocytes was similar, but blastocyst rates were different among activation treatments, the number of embryos used to assess blastocyst quality was not uniform.

Statistical analysis

The proportion of activated oocytes for each treatment was analyzed by chi-squared analysis and, when appropriate, by Fisher's exact test. A level of 5% significance was used.

Results

Immunofluorescent evaluation of tubulin and chromatin

Nuclear and microtubular patterns seen after fertilization or artificial activation were metaphase II (MII), anaphase or telophase II (A/T) and pronuclear (PN) stages. Unusual patterns such as transition MII/pronucleus (MII/PN) and metaphase III (MIII) stages were also observed.

Nuclear and microtubular dynamics are graphically represented in Figs. 1 and 2. In Fig. 1a, the percentage of oocytes arrested in MII from 2 to 16 h after activation showed that in treatments I, D, IS, ID and ISD, as early as at the 2-h collection moment, there were less (p < 0.05) oocytes in MII (77.8, 0.0, 80.0, 25.0 and 50.0%, respectively) than in IVF-Control group (100%). Similar pattern was observed in several activation treatments until 14 h. On the contrary, oocytes arrested in MII in treatment I at 16 h and in C from 8 to 16 h occurred more frequently (p < 0.05) than in IVF-Control (Fig. 1a).

Figure 1 Normal progression of bovine metaphase II (a) oocytes through anaphase/telophase II (b) and pronuclear (c) stages from 2 to 16 h after the onset of fertilization (IVF-Control) or artificial activation: control group (C); 20 mM strontium for 6 h (S); 5 μM ionomycin for 5 min (I); 2 mM 6-DMAP for 4 h (D); treatment I followed by treatment S (IS); treatments I and D (ID); treatments I, S and D (ISD); and treatments S and D (SD). Asterisk (*) indicates significantly different (p < 0.05) from IVF-Control.

Figure 2 Unusual progression of bovine oocytes through transition metaphase II/pronucleus (MII/PN; a) and metaphase III (b) stages from 2 to 16 h after the onset of artificial activation: 20 mM strontium for 6 h (S); 5 μM ionomycin for 5 min (I); 2 mM 6-DMAP for 4 h (D); treatment I followed by treatment S (IS); treatments I and D (ID); treatments I, S and D (ISD); and treatments S and D (SD). Asterisk (*) indicates significantly different (p < 0.05) from IVF-Control.

In Fig. 1b, showing progression to anaphase/telophase II (A/T) stage, there were more (p < 0.05) oocytes in A/T in treatments I, IS and ISD (22.2, 20.0 and 50.0%, respectively) at 2 h compared to IVF-Control (0.0%). The same occurred in treatments IS at 4 h (44.4%) and S at 8 and 10 h (88.9 and 77.8%, respectively), which were superior (p < 0.05) to IVF-Control (5.0, 42.1 and 5.0%, respectively). Conversely, A/T stage percentage in ID, ISD, SD and C at 8 h (0.0% for all) was inferior (p < 0.05) to IVF-Control (42.1%).

The first evidence of pronuclear development (Fig. 1c) in IVF-Control was at 10 h and pronuclear rates increased progressively until 20 h (data shown only until 16 h). Pronuclear stage started earlier in activated oocytes, because treatments D, ID and ISD at 6 h (40.0, 100 and 100%, respectively) and 8 h (22.2, 100 and 100%, respectively) and IS at 8 h (33.3%) presented higher pronuclear rates (p < 0.05) than IVF-Control (0.0% for both 6 and 8 h). Conversely, I and C were inferior (p < 0.05) to IVF-Control from 10 to 16 h.

Oocytes treated with single (D) or combined 6-DMAP (ID, ISD and SD) presented a pronucleus-like structure, smaller than a completely formed pronucleus and with more condensed chromatin and that was formed directly from the MII chromosomes without neither second meiosis completion nor sister chromatid segregation. Meiotic spindle disruption was observed after these treatments, followed by decondensation of chromosomes on the metaphase plate and development of the mentioned pronucleus-like structure. We called this developmental stage as transition MII/PN and it was significantly apparent (p < 0.05; Fig. 2a) in treatment D at 2, 4 and 6 h (100, 93.3 and 30.0%, respectively); in ID at 2 and 4 h (75.0 and 83.3%, respectively); in ISD at 4 h (100%); and in SD at 4, 6 and 8 h (100, 10.0 and 30.0%, respectively).

Metaphase III (MIII) is observed in activated oocytes that resume second meiosis division with 2nd PB emission, but fail to progress through development and exhibit another metaphase arrest, named MIII. This stage was observed in several activation treatments (Fig. 2b), but it was only significant (p < 0.05) in treatment I at 6, 8 and 10 h (22.2, 50.0 and 55.6%, respectively) and in IS at 10 h (44.4%).

Pronuclear development and status, cleavage and blastocyst development and quality

Regarding to pronuclear development (Table 1), best treatments (p < 0.05) were ISD (81.7%) at 22 h; D (66.7%), IS (63.3%), ID (73.3%) and ISD (76.7%) at 26 h; and D (86.7%), IS (85.0%) and ID (78.3%) at 30 h.

Table 1 Pronuclear development (PN), cleavage and blastocyst development rates in bovine oocytes after in vitro maturation (IVM) for 22, 26, or 30 h and activation with different treatments*

a–iValues with different superscripts within columns are significantly different (p < 0.05).

*PN was assessed at 15 to 16 h; cleavage at 46 to 48 h; and blastocyst development on Day 7. The activation treatments were: control group (C); 20 mM strontium for 6 h (S); 5 μM ionomycin for 5 min (I); 2 mM 6-DMAP for 4 h (D); treatment I followed by treatment S (IS); treatments I and D (ID); treatments I, S and D (ISD); and treatments S and D (SD).

Pronuclear status was evaluated by the number of pronuclei (PN) and polar bodies (PB) at 15 to 16 h after activation (Table 2). Only zygotes with 1PN were observed in treatments S and I. In S, there were zygotes with 1 and 2PB (35.7 and 60.7%, respectively) and in I, with 0, 1 and 2PB (14.3, 57.1 and 28.6%, respectively). Zygotes 1PN/2PB were more frequent (p < 0.05) in IS (77.4%) and 1PN/1PB zygotes in D (56.3%), ID (89.1%), ISD (65.4%) and SD (73.9%). In treatments D (3.1%) and ISD (3.8%), 3PN zygotes were observed.

Higher cleavage rates (p < 0.05) were obtained in treatments ISD (80.0%) at 22 h; ID (83.3%) and ISD (91.7%) at 26 h; and I (86.7%), IS (90.0%), ID (85.0%) and ISD (95.0%) at 30 h (Table 1).

Table 2 Pronuclear status in bovine zygotes at 15 to 16 h after activation of oocytes in vitro matured for 26 h*

a,b,cValues with different superscripts within columns are significantly different (p < 0.05).

A,B,CValues with different superscripts within rows are significantly different (p < 0.05).

*Number of pronuclei (PN) and polar bodies (PB). The activation treatments were: 20 mM strontium for 6 h (S); 5 μM ionomycin for 5 min (I); 2 mM 6-DMAP for 4 h (D); treatment I followed by treatment S (IS); treatments I and D (ID); treatments I, S and D (ISD); and treatments S and D (SD).

For blastocyst development, treatments ID (25.0%) and ISD (18.3%) at 22 h; and ID at 26 h (45.0%) and 30 h (50.0%) were the best (p < 0.05; Table 1).

Observing single treatments (Table 1), at 22 h, S (33.3%) presented pronuclear development similar (p > 0.05) to D (30.0%), but it was the best (p < 0.05) in cleavage (53.3%); and I (1.7%), S (1.7%) and D (5.0%) were similar (p > 0.05) in blastocyst development. At 26 h, S (60.0%) and D (66.7%) were similar (p > 0.05) and superior (p < 0.05) to I (36.7%) in pronuclear development; but they were all similar (p > 0.05) in cleavage (61.7 to 70.0%) and blastocyst development (13.3 to 21.7%). At 30 h, D (86.7%) was superior (p < 0.05) to S (53.5%) and I (63.3%) for pronuclear development; I (86.7%) was superior (p < 0.05) to D (68.3%) in cleavage; and I (18.3%) and D (13.3%) were similar (p > 0.05) in blastocyst development.

Also in Table 1, regarding the association of two drugs, IS was similar (p > 0.05) to S, respectively, in pronuclear, cleavage and blastocyst development at 22 h (28.3 vs. 33.3%, 45.0 vs. 53.3% and 5.0 vs. 1.7%) and 26 h (63.3 vs. 60.0%, 76.7 vs. 66.7% and 8.3 vs. 13.3%), but IS (85.0, 90.0 and 18.3%) was superior (p < 0.05) to S (53.5, 73.3 and 5.0%) at 30 h. When IS was compared to I, it was superior (p < 0.05) in pronuclear development at 22 h (28.3 vs. 5.0%), 26 h (63.3 vs. 36.7%) and 30 h (85.0 vs. 63.3%) and in cleavage at 22 h (45.0 vs. 3.3%). Treatment ID was superior (p < 0.05) to I and D in all evaluations at 22 h and ID was superior (p < 0.05) to D in cleavage at 30 h (85.0 vs. 68.3%) and in blastocyst development at 26 h (45.0 vs. 21.7%) and 30 h (50.0 vs. 13.3%). ID was frequently superior (p < 0.05) to I, except in pronuclear development (78.3 vs. 63.3%) and cleavage (85.0 vs. 86.7%) at 30 h. Treatment SD was similar (p > 0.05) to S and/or D at 22 h, but inferior (p < 0.05) at 26 and 30 h in all evaluations (Table 1).

Three-treatment combination ISD was superior (p < 0.05) to S, I, D, IS and/or ID in pronuclear development and cleavage at 22 h. Conversely, ISD was inferior (p < 0.05) to ID in blastocyst development at 26 h (20.0 vs. 45.0%) and 30 h (15.0 vs. 50.0%) and to D in pronuclear development at 30 h (75.0 vs. 86.7%; Table 1).

Total, ICM and TE cell numbers and ICM/total cell ratio were assessed for blastocyst quality evaluation in expanded blastocysts (Table 3). At 22 h, SD presented the lowest (p < 0.05) ICM, TE and total cell mean (±SD) number and ICM/total cell ratio (3, 41, 44 and 0.07, respectively) compared to D (22, 88, 110 and 0.20), ID (25 ± 17, 64 ± 32, 89 ± 47 and 0.28) and ISD (22 ± 14, 69 ± 15, 91 ± 23 and 0.24). For ICM cell number, the highest (p < 0.05) values (p < 0.05) occurred in treatments D (37 ± 5) and ID (39 ± 17) at 26 h; and SD (38) at 30 h. For TE cell number, D (31 ± 11) was the worst (p < 0.05) at 26 h, but the best (77 ± 22) at 30 h. For total cell number, the best treatments were ID (104 ± 35) and SD (101 ± 5) at 26 h; and I (99 ± 50) and D (102 ± 19) at 30 h. The highest (p < 0.05) ICM/total cell ratio was observed in D (0.55) at 26 h; and in SD (0.42) at 30 h (Table 3).

Table 3 Cell number (mean ± SD) in ICM, TE and total and ICM/total cell ratio in expanded blastocysts obtained after 7 day-culture of bovine oocytes in vitro matured (IVM) for 22, 26, or 30 h and activated with different treatments*

a–,fValues with different superscripts within columns are significantly different (p < 0.05).

*ICM: inner cell mass; TE: trophectoderm. The activation treatments were: control group (C); 20 mM strontium for 6 h (S); 5 μM ionomycin for 5 min (I); 2 mM 6-DMAP for 4 h (D); treatment I followed by treatment S (IS); treatments I and D (ID); treatments I, S and D (ISD); and treatments S and D (SD).

Discussion

Immunofluorescent evaluation of tubulin and chromatin

Immunofluorescent evaluation of tubulin and chromatin was used to assess and compare nuclear dynamics in bovine oocytes after fertilization or artificial activation. In the present work, sperm penetration was observed at 4 h.p.i., which is in agreement with previous descriptions of sperm penetration occurring from 3 h.p.i. (Saeki et al., Reference Saeki, Kato, Hosoi, Miyake, Utsumi and Iritani1991) to 6 h.p.i. (Xu & Greve, Reference Xu and Greve1988; Kim et al., Reference Kim, Lee, Lee, Lee, Han, Kim and Lee2002).

There were less oocytes in MII stage from 2 to 10 h in most activation treatments compared to IVF-Control, indicating earlier meiosis resumption in activated oocytes. At 16 h, in all treatments, except in I and C, MII rates were similar to IVF-Control, confirming that meiosis resumption is a step easily achieved after artificial activation (Verlhac et al., Reference Verlhac, Cúbica, Clarke and Maro1994; Liu et al., Reference Liu, Ju and Yang1998).

As a consequence of earlier meiosis resumption, cell cycle progression to anaphase/telophase II (A/T) and to pronuclear stages was faster in activated oocytes. In some treatments, besides faster progression, the A/T stage lasted longer, since A/T stage reduced at 10 h in IVF-Control and only at 12 h in S and IS treatments.

The first evidence of pronuclear formation in IVF-Control was observed at 10 h after sperm penetration (or 14 h.p.i.). In experiments where sperm penetration occurred at 3 to 6 h.p.i., pronuclear formation was observed 4 to 6 h later, which means at 10 to 12 h.p.i. (Xu & Greve, Reference Xu and Greve1988; Saeki et al., Reference Saeki, Kato, Hosoi, Miyake, Utsumi and Iritani1991). It was demonstrated that longer sperm preincubation to induce capacitation reduces both the time length for sperm penetration and for pronuclear development (Kim et al., Reference Kim, Lee, Lee, Lee, Han, Kim and Lee2002). In this way, pronuclear development delay observed here may have been influenced by the IVF procedure, which did not include sperm incubation prior to insemination.

Pronuclear formation timing was very distinct among activation treatments. It was accelerated 4 h in treatments D, ID and ISD and 2 h in treatment IS; but it was similar to IVF-Control in treatments S and SD; and delayed 4 h in treatment I. This evidence may have important application in somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) procedures, since for efficient reprogramming, nuclear envelope breakdown and premature chromatin condensation must occur in order to expose the transferred nucleus to the cytoplasmic oocyte factors necessary for early development (Heindryckx et al., Reference Heindryckx, Rybouchkin, Van Der Elst and Dhont2002). To increase the transferred nucleus exposition to the ooplasm and thus improving reprogramming potential, many approaches have been tested as recloning or serial nuclear transfer (reviewed by Peura & Trounson, Reference Peura and Trounson1998), increased time between fusion and activation (De Sousa et al., Reference De Sousa, Dobrinsky, Zhu, Archibald, Ainslie, Bosma, Bowering, Bracken, Ferrier, Fletcher, Gasparrini, Harkness, Johnston, Ritchie, Ritchie, Travers, Albertini, Dinnyes, King and Wilmut2002) or utilization of enucleated prophase I oocytes as recipient cytoplasms (Polanski et al., Reference Polanski, Hoffmann and Tsurumi2005). Since activation treatments using 6-DMAP, especially D, ID and ISD, accelerate pronuclear formation, anticipating nuclear envelope organization, they may reduce the exposition of the karyoplast to the recipient cytoplasm when used in SCNT. This could affect nuclear reprogramming of the transferred nucleus and consequently embryonic development. Then, compared to 6-DMAP, treatments using strontium may benefit nuclear reprogramming in SCNT.

At 16 h, there were more pronuclear stage embryos in treatments IS and ISD than in IVF-Control. This apparent superiority of the activation treatments was due to the evidence that in IVF-Control pronuclear formation rates progressively increased until 20 h after sperm penetration.

The A/T stage was not observed during incubation with 6-DMAP and, in treatment ISD, this stage disappeared rapidly when 6-DMAP was introduced into the culture media (2 h after the beginning of the activation with I and S). This phenomenon was due to direct progression from MII to pronuclear stage, because 6-DMAP is a broad-spectrum phosphorylation inhibitor that disrupts meiotic spindle, inhibits 2PB emission and accelerates pronuclear formation, by acting directly through nuclear lamins or indirectly by MAP kinase inactivation (Liu et al., Reference Liu, Ju and Yang1998; Loi et al., Reference Loi, Ledda, Fulka Jr, Cappai and Moor1998). All oocytes treated with 6-DMAP presented a pronucleus-like structure that was formed directly from the MII chromosomes. Such condition, named here as transition MII/PN, was a transitory stage between metaphase II and pronuclear stage. It was observed as early as 2 h in D and ID treatments and 4 h in ISD and SD treatments (in which the incubation with 6-DMAP started 2 h later, due to the use of strontium alone). Since the MII/PN frequency fell after 6 h in all treatments, this stage lasted only during oocyte exposition to activation medium in the presence of 6-DMAP.

Even though in most oocytes activated with 6-DMAP transition MII/PN progressed to the pronuclear stage, in some oocytes treated with D and SD, A/T stage was observed when 6-DMAP was removed from the media. Thus, we can suppose that MII/PN transition is a reversible stage that can lead to pronuclear stage or return to metaphase II stage, in cases of insufficient activation stimulus. Once in MII, these oocytes remain arrested or progress to A/T and pronuclear stages due to spontaneous decrease in MPF activity during oocyte ageing (Kikuchi et al., Reference Kikuchi, Izaike, Noguchi, Furukawa, Daen, Naito and Toyoda1995).

In some oocytes, the unusual pattern of metaphase III (MIII) arrest was observed. MIII occurs in activated oocytes that resume second meiosis division with 2PB emission, but fail to progress through development. In these oocytes, chromosomes recondense and originate a structure similar to a metaphase, named MIII (Kubiak, Reference Kubiak1989; Araki et al., Reference Araki, Naito, Haraguchi, Suzuki, Yokoyama, Inoue, Aizawa, Toyoda and Sato1996). It is generated when an activation stimulus, besides promoting MPF inactivation, is insufficient to inactivate MAP kinase and to prevent de novo MPF synthesis (Araki et al., Reference Araki, Naito, Haraguchi, Suzuki, Yokoyama, Inoue, Aizawa, Toyoda and Sato1996; Liu et al., Reference Liu, Ju and Yang1998). It is known that MIII may be avoided by the use of multiple calcium pulses or by the combination of different activation treatments (Vitullo & Ozil, Reference Vitullo and Ozil1992). In this work, MIII occurred in all treatments except in IVF-Control and ISD and it was significant in treatments I and IS, confirming that activation treatment intensity may account for MIII establishment. Decrease in the number of MIII oocytes during culture period indicated that it is a stage that may be overcome by spontaneous decrease in MPF activity as long as oocyte ages (Kikuchi et al., Reference Kikuchi, Izaike, Noguchi, Furukawa, Daen, Naito and Toyoda1995).

Pronuclear development and status, cleavage and blastocyst development and quality

At fertilization, the sperm cell promotes multiple spikes of intracellular free calcium within the oocytes during several hours: an initial transient is followed by a series of smaller transient increases (Grupen et al., Reference Grupen, Nottle and Nagashima2002). Activation treatments aim to mimic the events promoted by spermatozoa and may act in distinct pathways. Some promote intracellular free calcium concentration increase in one pulse such as ionomycin (Loi et al., Reference Loi, Ledda, Fulka Jr, Cappai and Moor1998) or in multiple pulses, such as strontium (Cuthbertson et al., Reference Cuthbertson, Whittingham and Cobbold1981). Others promote inhibition of protein synthesis, e.g. cycloheximide (Nussbaum & Prather, Reference Nussbaum and Prather1995), or protein phosphorylation, e.g. 6-DMAP (Susko-Parrish et al., Reference Susko-Parrish, Leibfried-Rutledge, Northey, Schutzkus and First1994). Since multiple intracellular calcium pulses are more effective than a single peak for activation (Vitullo & Ozil, Reference Vitullo and Ozil1992) and treatments that promote a single pulse are frequently associated with protein synthesis or phosphorylation inhibitors, in this study we aimed to compare single and combined treatments of strontium (S), ionomycin (I) and 6-DMAP (D) for activation of bovine oocytes in vitro matured for 22, 26 and 30 h.

Pronuclear status in activated oocytes was evaluated by the number of pronuclei (PN) and polar bodies (PB) at 15 to 16 h after activation treatments. In mice, an interesting research described the relationship between actin filaments, microtubules and parthenogenesis dynamics to the pronuclear status (Webb et al., Reference Webb, Howlett and Maro1986). When there is a peripheral meiotic spindle over an actin filament-rich area, a zygote with 1PN/2PB was formed; while central meiotic spindle and cortical actin promoted immediate cleavage; peripheral spindle and cortical actin induced 2PN/1PB appearance; and disorganized meiotic spindle promoted 1PN/1PB establishment (Webb et al., Reference Webb, Howlett and Maro1986). In agreement with these findings, in treatments using 6-DMAP (D, ID, ISD and SD) meiotic spindle disruption was evident and the number of 1PN/1PB was higher. On the contrary, in S and IS treatments, where no spindle disruption occurred, 1PN/2PB frequency was higher. Summarizing, the latest treatments promoted pronuclear development more similar to that observed after fertilization with 2PB emission.

Since all oocytes were selected for 1PB presence before activation treatments, 0PB and 1PB zygotes may have appeared, respectively, due to degeneration of 2 or 1PB. In treatments S, I and ID, no zygotes possessing more than 1PN were observed, while in treatment IS and SD there were 2PN zygotes and in D and ISD, 2PN and 3PN zygotes. Formation of more than two pronuclei in activated oocytes might be caused by premature DNA synthesis that induces karyokinesis before cytokinesis (De La Fuente & King, Reference De La Fuente and King1998). However, it will be necessary to observe DNA synthesis and follow actin dynamics in activated oocytes to confirm this hypothesis.

Treatment ID was the most effective for the production of diploid zygotes (1PN/1PB) and the treatment IS was the best for haploid development (1PN/2PB).

It is known that artificial activation success depends on oocyte age (maturation time; Presicce & Yang, Reference Presicce and Yang1994), since activation is more easily achieved in aged oocytes due to spontaneous reduction on MPF activity (Kikuchi et al., Reference Kikuchi, Izaike, Noguchi, Furukawa, Daen, Naito and Toyoda1995). In this experiment, most activation treatments showing higher pronuclear development rates were obtained in oocytes matured for 30 h compared to 22 h. In control group (C), it was also noticed that increasing IVM culture period resulted in higher pronuclear formation and cleavage rates due to spontaneous activation.

For single treatments in young oocytes (IVM for 22 h), the stimulus promoted by S and D was better for pronuclear development and cleavage compared to the single calcium pulse promoted by I. Conversely, treatment I was sufficient for activation of aged oocytes (IVM for 30 h). We noticed that strontium was more appropriate than the other single treatments in early matured bovine oocytes (IVM for 22 h), maybe because it promotes multiple calcium increases in bovine, as observed in mice (Bos-Mikich et al., Reference Bos-Mikich, Wood, Candy and Whittingham1995).

Another observation is that 6-DMAP was more efficient when there was an initial reduction on MPF activity that may be promoted by a calcium increase (in combined treatments ID and ISD) or by MPF spontaneous reduction during oocyte ageing (in treatment D at 26 and 30 h).

For young oocytes (IVM for 22 h), a stronger stimulus was necessary for achieving higher activation and cleavage rates and it was obtained using the three-combined treatment ISD. This is in agreement with previous observation showing that oocyte age influence on parthenogenetic activation can be minimized by promotion of multiple intracellular calcium pulses (Vitullo & Ozil, Reference Vitullo and Ozil1992) or by combination of different artificial activation treatments (Yang et al., Reference Yang, Presicce, Moraghan, Jiang and Foote1994; Liu et al., Reference Liu, Ju and Yang1998). This beneficial effect of combining treatments was observed in ID compared to D. However, IS was similar to S in activation, cleavage and blastocyst development rates, confirming strontium ability to activate by itself young oocytes.

According to the information that aged oocytes are easier to be activated, more artificial treatments were able to promote high activation and development rates after IVM for 26 and 30 h than for 22 h. At 26 h, combined treatments IS and ID did not improve activation and cleavage rates obtained in single treatments S and D, but blastocyst formation in ID was superior to all treatments. However, at 30 h, combined treatments improved activation and cleavage rates, since IS was superior to S in activation and ID and IS were, respectively, superior to D and S in cleavage and blastocyst. It is interesting to notice that for single activation treatments oocyte ageing influence was evident as soon as IVM for 26 h compared to 22 h, while in combined treatments a longer ageing was necessary since its effect was only observed at 30 h. Thus, a smaller MPF reduction due to ageing from 22 to 26 h provokes more effects in single treatments than in combined ones that required longer ageing and possible stronger spontaneous decline on MPF activity.

Activation and blastocyst development rates in treatments ISD and SD were not influenced by oocyte age. Treatment ISD promoted the highest activation stimulus, since it was a combination of three different agents. This can be the reason why it was successful in promoting higher rates of activation and did not require further ageing (or spontaneous MPF decline) to be effective. However, SD treatment promoted lower rates of activation and development in all evaluated moments. This was the first report in bovine of a combined treatment using strontium and 6-DMAP (ISD and SD) and we can observe that, without ionomycin (in treatment SD), it was not an effective combination for artificial activation. Furthermore, SD was inferior to both single treatments S and D in activation and cleavage at 26 and 30 h and to D in blastocyst development at 26 and 30 h.

In mice, a recent work described interesting results using strontium followed not simultaneously by 6-DMAP (Ma et al., Reference Ma, Liu, Miao, Han, Zhang, Miao, Yanagimachi and Tan2005). Higher blastocyst rates and ICM cell number were achieved in younger oocytes, but the combination of strontium and 6-DMAP was harmful for aged oocytes. Here, we observed similar developmental rates at 22, 26 and 30 h in ISD and SD, so these treatments were not influenced by oocyte age. However, comparing D and ID to ISD and SD at 26 and 30 h we observed the detrimental effect of using the combination of strontium and 6-DMAP in aged oocytes. Maybe the stimulus promoted by this association is excessive in aged oocytes that already present a spontaneous decrease in MPF activity. This event was also observed in ISD treatment: besides higher rates of activation and cleavage at 22 h, blastocyst development rates for ISD compared to ID were similar at 22 h and inferior at 26 and 30 h. In addition, ISD was inferior to D in activation and cleavage at 30 h. Then, the strong ISD stimulus able to promote efficient activation and cleavage can have detrimental effects on further embryonic development, similar to the cytotoxicity observed after excessive long-lasting calcium increase (Loi et al., Reference Loi, Ledda, Fulka Jr, Cappai and Moor1998). In addition, that condition may be influenced by oocyte age.

Bovine blastocysts are constituted by two morphologically distinct cell groups: (1) inner cell mass (ICM), which forms the embryo; and (2) trophectoderm (TE), which forms the placenta (Stojkovic et al., Reference Stojkovic, Büttner, Zakhartchenko, Brem and Wolf1998). Thus, the number of embryos reaching the blastocyst stage is as important for evaluation of embryonic development as their quality. Blastocyst quality can be estimated by ICM and TE cell number as much as by ICM/total cell ratio (Bos-Mikich et al., Reference Bos-Mikich, Whittingham and Jones1997), since lower cell number in ICM affects embryo viability and lower number of TE cells is detrimental for placental development (Koo et al., Reference Koo, Kang, Choi, Park, Kim, Oh, Son, Park, Lee and Han2002).

Detrimental effects of treatment SD previously mentioned in this work were also observed for blastocyst quality, with reduction in ICM cell number at 22 and 26 h, but the reduction in TE cell number at 30 h resulted in higher ICM/total cell ratio for SD at this time of activation. Comparing treatments with similar ICM cell number, ICM/total cell ratio was similar for ID and ISD at 22 h; for S, I and IS at 26 h; and for I, D, IS, ID and ISD at 30 h. Therefore, all these treatments allowed the development of similar quality embryos.

In summary, we observed that single or combined treatment of strontium, ionomycin and 6-DMAP influenced cell cycle kinetics and embryo development to different extents. This information can be used to comprehend mechanisms of oocyte activation and to guide experimental design of researches in this area. For example, ISD is useful to promote higher activation and cleavage rates in young oocytes. Treatments S and IS show cell cycle progression and pronuclear formation timing similar to fertilization and they are probably more efficient for nuclear reprogramming. Treatment ID, which promoted higher blastocyst development rates, can be used to obtain embryos for studies on early embryonic development events or on genomic imprinting processes after parthenogenetic activation. We conclude that association of strontium and 6-DMAP was only effective when it was also combined to ionomycin and applied in young bovine oocytes. Despite the lower influence of oocyte age in treatments using strontium, there is a detrimental effect of associating strontium to 6-DMAP in aged oocytes.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by FAPESP: grant # 00/00006-9 and 02/00971-1.

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Figure 0

Figure 1 Normal progression of bovine metaphase II (a) oocytes through anaphase/telophase II (b) and pronuclear (c) stages from 2 to 16 h after the onset of fertilization (IVF-Control) or artificial activation: control group (C); 20 mM strontium for 6 h (S); 5 μM ionomycin for 5 min (I); 2 mM 6-DMAP for 4 h (D); treatment I followed by treatment S (IS); treatments I and D (ID); treatments I, S and D (ISD); and treatments S and D (SD). Asterisk (*) indicates significantly different (p < 0.05) from IVF-Control.

Figure 1

Figure 2 Unusual progression of bovine oocytes through transition metaphase II/pronucleus (MII/PN; a) and metaphase III (b) stages from 2 to 16 h after the onset of artificial activation: 20 mM strontium for 6 h (S); 5 μM ionomycin for 5 min (I); 2 mM 6-DMAP for 4 h (D); treatment I followed by treatment S (IS); treatments I and D (ID); treatments I, S and D (ISD); and treatments S and D (SD). Asterisk (*) indicates significantly different (p < 0.05) from IVF-Control.

Figure 2

Table 1 Pronuclear development (PN), cleavage and blastocyst development rates in bovine oocytes after in vitro maturation (IVM) for 22, 26, or 30 h and activation with different treatments*

Figure 3

Table 2 Pronuclear status in bovine zygotes at 15 to 16 h after activation of oocytes in vitro matured for 26 h*

Figure 4

Table 3 Cell number (mean ± SD) in ICM, TE and total and ICM/total cell ratio in expanded blastocysts obtained after 7 day-culture of bovine oocytes in vitro matured (IVM) for 22, 26, or 30 h and activated with different treatments*