Mild hypothermia promotes the viability of in vitro-produced bovine blastocysts and their transcriptional expression of the cold-inducible transcription factor Rbm3 during in vitro culture

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Abstract

In this study, we evaluated the effects of holding in vitro-produced bovine blastocysts under mild hypothermia (33°C or 35°C), by examining viability and hatching rates of day 7 blastocysts (day 0: in vitro fertilization) cultured for 6 days and transcriptional expression of cold-inducible transcription factors Cirp and Rbm3, implicated in mild hypothermia-induced cellular protection against various types of stress. In the normothermic control (38.5°C), viability of the embryos decreased rapidly after day 10, and most samples were degenerated on day 13. However, mild hypothermia, particularly at 33°C, resulted in maintenance of high embryonic survival rates until day 13 (77.1% on day 13) and significant increases in transcriptional expression of Rbm3 in day 11 embryos compared with those at 38.5°C. Thus, our results suggested that upregulation of Rbm3 may occur in response to mild hypothermia in many bovine embryos, providing insights into the effects of mild hypothermia on embryo quality.

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Ishii, T., Kawano, K., Tanaka, N., Tomita, K., Saito, N., & Yamada, M. (2019). Mild hypothermia promotes the viability of in vitro-produced bovine blastocysts and their transcriptional expression of the cold-inducible transcription factor Rbm3 during in vitro culture. Journal of Reproduction and Development, 65(3), 275–280. https://doi.org/10.1262/jrd.2018-142

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