Births of kittens produced by intracytoplasmic sperm injection of domestic cat oocytes matured in vitro.

In Experiment 1, cleavage frequency and in vitro development of domestic cat embryos produced after in vitro maturation of oocytes obtained from ovaries after ovariohysterectomy (in vitro) with that of oocytes retrieved from follicle-stimulating hormone-treated donors at 24 h after administration of luteinizing hormone (in vivo) and fertilization by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) or IVF were compared. In each group presumptive zygotes were assessed for cleavage on IVC Days 1 and 4 and for development to blastocysts on IVC Day 7. In vitro matured oocytes had lower frequencies of meiotic maturation (59.2% v. 66.5%), cleavage at Day 1 (41.4% v. 64.9%) and development to the morula stage at Day 4 (65.8% v. 87.9%) than did in vivo matured oocytes, after ICSI and IVF. Development to the blastocyst stage was lower in in vitro matured oocytes (19.0%) than in vivo matured oocytes (29.5%) after ICSI. In Experiment 2, we evaluated the capacity of sperm injected oocytes without a visible polar body to undergo cleavage and in vitro development. More in vivo matured than in vitro matured oocytes underwent cleavage at Day 1 (46.6% v. 12.6%) and developed to the morula stage by Day 4 (66.7% v. 46.1%), but no blastocysts were obtained at Day 7 in either group. In Experiment 3, we evaluated the in vivo viability of domestic cat embryos derived from ICSI of in vitro matured oocytes. Morula stage embryos were transferred to 18 domestic cat recipients either on Day 4 or 5 after oocyte recovery. A total of 3 domestic cat recipients were pregnant after transfer to recipients on Day 5. Two pregnant cats delivered two normal and healthy live male kittens on Day 68 of gestation and the remaining cat delivered a male kitten on Day 62 that died during the last two days of gestation. These results demonstrate that: (1) inadequate cytoplasmic maturation of in vitro matured domestic cat oocytes is the main cause of deficient oocyte activation; (2) the injection of oocytes without a visible polar body is a useful technique to evaluate oocyte cytoplasmic maturation; and (3) blastocysts obtained after ICSI of in vitro matured oocytes are viable and not a result of parthenogenesis.

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