The drug busulphan is known to be cytotoxic to migrating primordial germ cells (PGCs). A technique is described in which doses of 0, 25, 50 and 250 μg busulphan in 40 μl sesame oil were injected into the yolk of White Leghorn eggs incubated for 0, 24, 48 and 72 h. The percentage survival values of these embryos showed that the older the embryo at the time of injection, the greater the survival. Increasing the dose of busulphan decreased the survival. The percentage of embryos showing abnormalities increased with higher doses of busulphan. The number of germ cells in histological sections from gonads of 16-day embryos was estimated and in embryos treated with 50 μg and 250 μg busulphan the number of germ cells was significantly less than in the controls. Eggs were injected with 50 μg busulphan at 24-30 h, and at 50-55 h the embryos received an intravascular injection of a germinal crescent cell suspension containing PGCs from Rhode Island Red embryos. Twenty hatchlings from these experiments were raised to sexual maturity. All these birds were fertile and half of the breeding groups producing offspring from the transferred germ cells at a rate of about 35% of the total. The technique would improve the efficiency of producing transgenic gametes.
CITATION STYLE
Vick, L., Luke, G., & Simkiss, K. (1993). Germ-line chimaeras can produce both strains of fowl with high efficiency after partial sterilization. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility, 98(2), 637–641. https://doi.org/10.1530/jrf.0.0980637
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