Bisection of Post-Compaction Bovine Embryos: The Difference in Viability Between the two Monozygotic Halves

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Abstract

Bisection of bovine post-compaction embryos has become a useful tool for improving embryo transfer results. Compared to pre-compaction division, the technique is simpler but is does involve some cellular damage and rarely provides two completely identical “halves”. Monozygotic pairs can therefore be divided into “good” and “poor” half embryos. By 4–6 h of culture in vitro, “good” halves remained significantly more viable than their poorer counterparts. Gytological evaluation after 24 h culture shows that the morphologically better halves contain more cells (an average of 45.9 vs 23.0) and have a higher mitotic index (6.1 % vs 3.1 %) than the poorer halves. The single transfer of 26 half-embryos resulted in 15 pregnancies (55.6 %) but no difference could be demonstrated between the results obtained with halves of different sizes. Nevertheless, the in vitro results support the contention that bigger halves give better results and also demonstrate that one half-embryo cannot be used as a control for the other in viability studies.

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Picard, L., Greve, T., King, W. A., Betteridge, K. J., & Jørgensen, P. H. (1986). Bisection of Post-Compaction Bovine Embryos: The Difference in Viability Between the two Monozygotic Halves. Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica, 27(1), 33–48. https://doi.org/10.1186/BF03548557

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