These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Intracytoplasmic injection of porcine, bovine, mouse, or human spermatozoon into porcine oocytes.
    Author: Kim NH, Jun SH, Do JT, Uhm SJ, Lee HT, Chung KS.
    Journal: Mol Reprod Dev; 1999 May; 53(1):84-91. PubMed ID: 10230820.
    Abstract:
    We determined the incidence of activation, male pronuclear formation, and apposition of pronuclei in porcine oocytes following intracytoplasmic injection of various porcine sperm components and foreign species spermatozoa, such as that of cattle, mouse or human. The porcine oocytes were activated by injection of a spermatozoon or an isolated sperm head. In contrast, injection of either sperm tail or a trypsin- or NaOH-treated sperm head failed to induce oocyte activation. Because injection of mouse, bovine, or human spermatozoon activated porcine oocytes, the sperm-borne activation factor(s) is not strictly species-specific. Male pronuclear formation and pronuclear apposition were observed in porcine oocytes following injection of porcine, bovine, mouse or human spermatozoa. Electrical stimulation following sperm cell injection did not enhance the incidence of male pronuclear formation or pronuclear apposition compared with sperm cell injection alone (P > 0.1). Following porcine sperm injection, the microtubular aster was organized from the neck of the spermatozoon, and filled the whole cytoplasm. In contrast, following injection of bovine, mouse, or human spermatozoon, the maternal-derived microtubules were organized from the cortex to the center of the oocytes, which seems to move both pronuclei to the center of oocytes. Cleavage to the two-cell stage was observed at 19-21 hr after injection of porcine spermatozoon. However, none of the oocytes following injection of mouse, bovine, or human spermatozoa developed to the mitotic metaphase or the two-cell stage. These results suggested that the oocyte activating factor(s) is present in the perinuclear material and that it is not species-specific for the porcine oocyte. Self-organized microtubules seemed to move the pronuclei into center of oocytes when foreign species spermatozoa were injected into porcine oocytes.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]