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Study on improvement of viability of mouse embryos after bisection.
1989
Lee H.J. | Kim T.S. | Choe S.Y. | Park H.S. | Park C.S.
Demi-embryos were successfully produced by bisection of ICR mouse embryos at preimplantation stages. They were microsurgically bisected using a microsurgical blade attached to a micromanipulator after pretreatment with 0.5 % pronase in PBS for two minutes or not. Embryos with softened zona pellucida were more easily bisected and less damaged than intact embryos. The highest success rate in bisection has been achieved by selecting blastocysts (94.1 % in success rate with intact blastocysts and 100 % in success rate with zona softened blastocysts). Demi-embryos without zona pellucida were cultured in D-PBS or M-16 medium at 37deg C, 5 % CO2 in air for 72 hours for 2-cell stage embryos, 48 hours for 4-to 8-cell stage embryos, 24 hours for morula stage embryos and 6-12 hours for blastocyst stage embryos. For the in vitro culture of 2-cell stage embryos, 100 micro M 2Na-EDTA was added to the media. M-16 medium was better for the in vitro development of mouse embryos than PBS, and PBS is not considered to be suitable for long-term culture of embryos, especially at early stage of cleavage. In M-16 medium, developing rate of demi-embryos of which pair underwent development to form eublastocysts was 15.8 % at 2-cell stage, 16.8 % at 4-cell stage, 38 % at 8-cell stage, 89.6 % at morula stage and 94.4 % at blastocyst stage, respectively. The more rapid and efficient production of demi-embryos and higher viability after bisection can be expected by softening zona pellucida with pronase and by selecting morulae or blastocysts rather than embryos at early stage of cleavage.
Show more [+] Less [-]Influence of temperature and age on the recovery of pseudorabies virus from houseflies (Musca domestica)
1989
Zimmerman, J.J. | Berry, W.J. | Beran, G.W. | Murphy, D.P.
In laboratory experiments, pseudorabies virus was readily recovered from within the body of houseflies (Musca domestica L) that had ingested the virus. Age of the fly and ambient temperature affected the rate of virus inactivation within the houseflies. Virus half-life in 3-day-old flies was 6.36 hours vs 2.81 hours in flies 8 or 13 days old. Half-life in 5-day old flies was 12.92 hours at 10 C, 5.95 hours at 20 C, and 2.69 hours at 30 C. Virus half-life in dead flies was 9.06 hours at 10 C, 4.28 hours at 20 C, and 1.71 hours at 30 C. The data did not provide any evidence of virus replication in either living or dead flies.
Show more [+] Less [-]Comparison of two methods for isolation of Mycobacterium paratuberculosis from bovine fecal samples
1989
Kim, Y.G. | Bech-Nielsen, S. | Gordon, J.C. | Slemons, R.D. | Spangler, E.
Fecal samples from 131 cattle clinically suspect for paratuberculosis were cultured bacteriologically, using the traditional sedimentation processing method and a processing method that included a centrifugation step. Of 16 samples that were contaminated, 6 were culture-positive on at least 1 medium and by 1 processing method. Ten of 131 (7.6%) fecal samples processed by both methods were lost because of contamination. The number of culture-positive samples (using both processing methods) were 65 of 121 (53.7%) on media without miconazole and 60 of 121 (49.6%) on media with miconazole. Seven of the 121 (5.8%) samples were culture-positive, using centrifugation, after 16 weeks' incubation at 37 C. Thirteen of 60 (21.7%) isolates were obtained only with centrifugation, and 10 of these had low colony counts, suggesting that a centrifugation step may have concentrated microorganisms that would have gone undetected without centrifugation. Six of 60 (10%) isolates positive for M paratuberculosis on the sedimentation method were negative on the centrifugation method. Contamination rates were significantly (P less than 0.001) increased when centrifugation was used. The miconazole significantly (P less 0.001) decreased contamination rates when centrifugation was used.
Show more [+] Less [-]Characterization of the attachment of Treponema hyodysenteriae to Henle intestinal epithelial cells in vitro
1989
Bowden, C.A. | Joens, L.A. | Kelley, L.M.
Properties of the attachment of Treponema hyodysenteriae to Henle intestinal epithelial (HIE 407) cells were examined. The frequency of attachment depended on the motility and viability of the spirochetes. Rabbit hyperimmune and swine convalescent antisera inhibited attachment. Treatment of HIE cells with neuraminidase had no effect on attachment; however, treatment of spirochetes with the enzyme decreased adherence significantly (P = 0.01). Attachment was inhibited by N-acetylneuraminic acid, D-glucuronic acid, and fetuin. Adherence was increased following coincubation with N-acetylglucosamine or yeast mannan. Surface antigens of T hyodysenteriae, isolated by chemical extraction, competitively inhibited adherence. Concentrated T hyodysenteriae culture supernatant fractions inhibited adherence, but concentrated phosphate buffered-saline washings of the spirochete and concentrated uninoculated media did not inhibit adherence. Sialic acid was detected in unwashed T hyodysenteriae and spent culture supernatant fractions in higher concentrations than from washed spirochetes and uninoculated media. It was concluded that the binding adhesins on T hyodysenteriae for cultured HIE cells may contain sialic acid residues.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effect of surgical manipulation, placental fluid, and flunixin meglumine on fetal viability and prostaglandin F2 alpha release in the gravid uterus of mares
1989
Pascoe, D.R. | Stover, S.M.
Twenty-one pregnant mares with single or twin conceptuses between 41 and 65 days of gestational age were allotted to 5 treatment groups. A ventral median celiotomy was performed in all mares. In group-1 mares (3 mares, single conceptus), the uterus and fetus were palpated for 5 minutes. In group-2 mares (3 mares, single conceptus, flunixin meglumine), 250 ml of sterile placental fluid was injected into the nongravid uterine horn. In group-3 mares (4 mares, unicornuate twin conceptuses), group-4 mares (3 mares, unicornuate twin conceptuses, flunixin meglumine), and group-5 mares (8 mares, bicornuate twin conceptuses, flunixin meglumine), 1 conceptus was removed from the uterus via hysterotomy. All mares received progesterone prophylactically until day 100 of gestation or until the fetus died. The 3 mares in group 1 delivered clinically normal, live foals. The mean prostaglandin F2 alpha metabolite (PGFM) plasma concentration peaked at 180 +/- 5.2 pg/ml during uterine manipulation and fetal palpation, then declined to baseline by 1 hour. Free placental fluid (group 2) undermined the chorioallantois ventrally and resulted in fetal death within 3 hours after surgery. The mean PGFM plasma concentration peaked at 39 +/- 4 pg/ml following injection of placental fluid. None of the remaining fetuses in the 7 mares with unicornuate twin conceptuses (groups 3 and 4) survived. Five mares with unicornuate twin conceptuses (group 5) delivered single viable foals. In another mare in group 5, the fetus was alive 4 days after surgery, when the mare was euthanatized for a fractured femur. The peak mean PGFM plasma concentration during hysterotomy in the mares not treated with flunixin meglumine (group 3) was 1,979 +/- 27.36 pg/ml, and the highest peak mean PGFM plasma concentration in the flunixin meglumine-treated hysterotomized mares (groups 4 and 5) was 123 +/- 4.8 pg/ml. Flunixin meglumine was at least 94% effective in inhibiting expected increases in PGFM plasma concentrations associated with hysterotomy.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of various cryoprotectants on the survival of mouse embryos cryopreserved by the quick freezing method
1989
Mazni, O.A. (Yokohama Univ. (Japan). Faculty of Engineering) | Takahashi, Y. | Valdez, C.A. | Nishinuma, M. | Kanagawa, H.