The assisted reproductive techniques (ARTs) such as in vitro fertilization, embryo transfer, and cryopreservation of gametes have contributed considerably to the development of biomedical sciences in addition to improving infertility treatments in humans as well as the breeding of domestic animals. However, ARTs used in canine species have strictly limited utility when compared with other mammalian species, including humans. Although successful somatic cell cloning has been reported, artificial insemination by frozen semen to date is only available for the improved breeding and reproduction for companion and working dogs as well as guide dogs for the blind. We describe here the successful cryopreservation of embryos and subsequent embryo transfer in dogs. Canine embryos were collected from excised reproductive organs after artificial insemination and subsequently cryopreserved by a vitrification method. When the 4-cell to morula stage of cryopreserved embryos were nonsurgically transferred into the uteri of nine recipient bitches using a cystoscope, five recipients became pregnant and four of them delivered a total of seven pups. The cryopreservation of embryos in canine species will facilitate the transportation and storage of genetic materials and will aid in the elimination of vertically transmitted diseases in dogs. In addition, this technique will contribute to the improved breeding of companion and working dogs such as guide dogs, drug-detecting dogs, and quarantine dogs.
Effective preselection of sex has been accomplished in several species of livestock and
also in humans using the flow cytometric sperm sorting method. A guaranteed high sorting
accuracy is a key prerequisite for the widespread use of sperm sexing. The standard
validation method is flow cytometric remeasurement of the DNA content of the sexed sperm.
Since this method relies on the same instrument that produced the original sperm
separation, it is not truly independent. Therefore, to be able to specifically produce
either male or female offspring in the dog, we developed a method of direct visualization
of sex chromosomes in a single sperm using fluorescence in situ
hybridization (FISH) as a validation method. Denaturation of canine spermatozoa by
immersion in 1 M NaOH for 4 min yielded consistent hybridization results with over 97%
hybridization efficiency and a good preservation of sperm morphology. There was no
significant difference between the theoretical ratio (50:50) and the observed ratio of X-
and Y-chromosome-bearing spermatozoa in any of the three dogs. In addition, the mean
purities of flow-sorted sex chromosomes in spermatozoa of the three dogs were 90.8% for
the X chromosome fraction and 89.6% for the Y chromosome fraction. This sorting was
evaluated by using the dual color FISH protocol. Therefore, our results demonstrated that
the FISH protocol worked reliably for both unsorted and sexed sperm samples.
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