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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The development and ultrastructure of intergeneric nuclear transfer embryos using ovine ooplasm.

Hamilton, Hamish MacDonald January 2005 (has links)
Title page, table of contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University of Adelaide Library. / This thesis encompasses work that aimed to further understand genomic reprogramming, an event crucial in obtaining development in cloned embryos produced by somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). An increasing number of different mammalian species have been cloned using nuclear transfer technology since Dolly the cloned sheep was first successfully produced. However, the biological mechanisms involved in the process of nuclear reprogramming are yet to be fully described. At the centre of this study was an intergeneric SCNT model, which was implemented to determine whether reprogramming factors are conserved across genera. The interaction between donor nucleus and recipient ooplasm was characterised with regard to developmental potential, timing of genome activation, nucleolus formation, and expression of significant proteins. In initial studies, fusion parameters of the intergeneric SCNT procedure were optimised for the ovine cytoplast and porcine donor granulosa cell. Cell fusion and lysis percentages were determined over a range of electrical pulse voltage, duration and repetition. The optimal electrofusion settings were a single DC pulse of 1.5 kV/cm for 20 usec following a 2 sec 400 kHz alignment pulse. In addition, it was demonstrated that ovine oocytes were sensitive to electric stimulation to the extreme that oocyte activation would occur no matter how low the voltage. The practical significance was that it would not be possible to implement a fusion before activation protocol. The ability of the ooplasm of one species to replicate chromosomes and support early embryo cleavage was determined in a preliminary experiment where intergeneric embryos were produced by SCNT using bovine and ovine foetal fibroblasts, and ovine ooplasm. After their construction, the embryos were allowed to develop for 7 days in vitro and the developmental stage determined by Hoechst staining and nuclei counting. In addition, chromosome spreads of the ovine and bovine somatic foetal fibroblast cell lines used in SCNT, as well as the intra- and intergeneric SCNT embryos were prepared to determine whether the ovine ooplasm was replicating the chromosomes according to the karyotype of the donor nucleus. The somatic cells were karyotyped with 54 and 60 chromosomes counted for ovine and bovine cells respectively. Bovine-ovine embryos were characterised as having a bovine karyotype as distinct from an ovine karyotype, due to the presence of only two metacentric chromosomes as compared with six that are found in the latter. These preliminary results indicated that bovine nuclei obtained from foetal fibroblast cells could initiate early pre-implantation embryo development with the support of ovine oocyte cytoplasm. The development of a proportion (33%) of ovine-ovine intrageneric SCNT embryos beyond the 16-cell stage indicated that an extensive characterisation of an intergeneric model could be performed satisfactorily. It was hypothesised that the ovine ooplasm would possess the ability to direct in vitro preimplantation embryo development after nuclear transfer using donor nuclei from a different genus, as has been demonstrated in studies using bovine and rabbit ooplasm. In this study, intergeneric SCNT embryos were constructed by the separate fusion of porcine and bovine cells with ovine cytoplasts (bovine-ovine and porcine-ovine respectively), cultured in vitro and the developmental characteristics compared with ovine-ovine SeNT embryos as well as ovine in vitro produced (IVP) embryos. These four groups of embryos were sampled to determine embryo cell numbers at 24, 36, 48, 72, 96, 120 and 168 h post-activation to compare development over time. Despite cleaving normally and undergoing the first three cleavage divisions at a rate comparable with ovine-ovine SCNT embryos, a major block in development occurred in the intergeneric embryos at the 8-16 cell stage. Consequently, no blastocyst formation was obtained as observed for the IVP and ovine-ovine SCNT controls. These results indicate that unlike the rabbit and bovine ooplasm, the ovine ooplasm is not suitable for intergeneric reprogramming of somatic nuclei from another genus, at least of porcine or bovine origin. To determine the effect of a less differentiated donor nucleus on intergeneric developmental potential, embryonic cell nuclear transfer (ECNT) was conducted in a separate experiment by fusing pluripotent bovine and ovine donor cells (obtained from day-4 preimplantation embryos) to ovine cytoplasts. After 7 days of culture, the cell number of embryos was determined by Hoechst staining and fluorescent observation. Despite observing a single bovine-ovine blastocyst (4.8%), the developmental block remained at the 8-16 cell stage of development. This outcome indicates that a less differentiated nucleus does not increase intergeneric developmental capability. It is well documented that the ooplasm supplies a large amount of mRNA and protein to the newly formed embryo, crucial for normal development leading up to the major activation of the embryonic genome. However, the interaction between the ooplasm as compared with the donor nucleus in SCNT embryos during this developmental period is poorly understood. This intergeneric SCNT model provided an opportunity to determine the role of the ooplasm on nucleolus formation, which is a marker for genome activation. Ultrastructural evidence was obtained that indicates the ovine ooplasm directs the initial assembly of the nucleolus independent of the species of the nuclear donor. Intergeneric porcine-ovine SCNT and intrageneric ovine-ovine SCNT embryos were constructed and the nucleolus ultrastructure and nucleolus associated rRNA synthesis examined in 1-,2-,4-, early 8-, late 8-and 16-cell embryos using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and light microscopical autoradiography. Intergeneric porcine-ovine SCNT embryos exhibited nucleolar precursor bodies (NPBs) of an ovine (ruminant) ultrastructure, but no active rRNA producing fibrillogranular nucleoli at any of the stages. Unusually, cytoplasmic organelles were located inside the nucleus of two porcineovine SCNT embryos. The ovine-ovine SCNT embryos, on the other hand, revealed fibrillogranular nucleoli in 16-cell embryos. In parallel, autoradiographic labelling over the nucleoplasm and, in particular, the nulcleoli was detected. Bovine-ovine SCNT embryos at the 8-cell stage were examined for nucleolar morphology and exhibited ruminant-type NPBs as well as structures that appeared to comprise of broken down fibrillar material, perhaps formerly of nucleolar origin from the donor cell. These observations indicate that factors within the ovine ooplasm are playing a role in the initial assembly of the embryonic nucleolus in intrageneric SCNT embryos. To further characterise nucleolus formation, immunocytochemical localisation by confocal microscopy of nucleolin, fibrillarin and RNA polymerase, three key proteins involved in processing rRNA transcripts, was performed on early 8-, late 8- and 16-cell embryos for ovineovine and porcine-ovine SCNT embryos. Nucleolin was localised throughout the nucleoplasm for all developmental stages examined in porcine-ovine and ovine-ovine SCNT embryos and, in particular, intensity around the presumptive nucleolar compartments in the later developmental stages. Fibrillarin and RNA polymerase I, on the other hand, were not detected in any ovineovine or porcine-ovine SCNT embryos or ovine IVP controls, although both proteins were detected in control bovine IVP blastocysts. This result indicates that the antifibrillarin and anti-RNA polymerase I were not compatible with the ovine form of these respective proteins. As nucleolin is not present in porcine in vivo embryos before the major activation of the embryonic genome, its presence in porcine-ovine SCNT embryo nucleus indicates that nucleolin is derived from the abundant protein and mRNA stored in the ovine ooplasm. The intergeneric SCNT model established in this thesis demonstrates that the ovine ooplasm lacks the ability to support embryonic development beyond the 16-cell stage. The TEM and autoradiographical studies, in combination with the protein immunocytochemistry study, confirmed that these embryos are unable to undergo the major activation of the embryonic genome, and that the ooplasm influences the initial nucleolar assembly in these embryos. / http://proxy.library.adelaide.edu.au/login?url= http://library.adelaide.edu.au/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?BBID=1167553 / Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Agriculture and Wine, 2005
2

Changes in Electrical Properties and Ooplasmic Activities of Na⁺, K⁺, H⁺, Ca⁺⁺, and Cl⁻ During Egg Development in the Locust / Electrical Properties, pH, and Ion Activities in Locust Eggs

Hawkins, Erika January 1991 (has links)
This thesis addresses two hypotheses: 1) ooplasmic ion activity is regulated during water uptake by locust eggs, and, 2) activities of Ca⁺⁺ and H⁺ are maintained at levels appropriate for their use as signals for developmental processes, including activation, in insect eggs. Hypothesis 1 is based on the perturbing effect of large changes in intracellular Na and/or K activity on enzyme function in eukaryotic cells. Hypothesis 2 is based on the ionic hypothesis of activation developed from studies of eggs of marine invertebrates. Electrical potential difference across egg membranes (PD_egg), and ooplasmic activities of Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻, Ca⁺⁺ and H⁺ were measured with double-barrelled ion-selective microelectrodes. Locust eggs maintained a measurable potential difference across egg membranes throughout development. Input resistance (Rᵢₙ) decreased by approximately 5-fold in eggs after fertilization suggesting that the chorion is not the major barrier to ion movements into and out from the egg. Chilling and anoxia decreased the contribution of a metabolic component to PD_egg. The effects of hypercapnia on PD_egg and ooplasmic pH suggest that the metabolic component may be a H⁺-pump. Chloride diffusion contributes to PD_egg in eggs after fertilization; contributions of other ions were relatively small. Potential differences measured in internally perfused locust eggs after osmotic lysis of the serosal epithelium indicated that the chloride-dependent component of PD_egg is developed across the chorion and/or serosal cuticle. In vivo values of PD_egg are probably less negative than values measured in control saline because chloride content of ground water is low. Ooplasmic sodium and potassium activities remained at typically intracellular levels during water uptake, possibly due to release from internal stores. Chloride activities were typical of extracellular fluids and were not regulated during water uptake. Measurements of pH and pea in locust eggs are consistent with the increases in these parameters predicted by the ionic hypothesis of activation. calcium activity in the ooplasm of unfertilized locust eggs (pCa 6.4 -4.9) appeared to be at a level appropriate for the use of calcium as a signal or second messenger. Calcium activity increased 100fold within 1 day of fertilization, and 1000-fold by day 3. Calcium entry from external sources at fertilization and release from internal stores later in development may contribute to the progressive increase in ooplasmic Ca⁺⁺ activity. The ooplasm likely alkalinizes after oviposition as ambient pCo₂ declines. Available data suggest a metabolically-dependent proton pump may control ooplasmic pH in locust eggs, in contrast to the Na⁺/H⁺ exchanger implicated in alkalinization of marine invertebrate eggs. / Thesis / Master of Science (MS)

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