Development and DNA polymerase activities in cultured preimplantation mouse embryos: comparison with embryos developed in vivo
- PMID: 1869864
- DOI: 10.1002/jez.1402580105
Development and DNA polymerase activities in cultured preimplantation mouse embryos: comparison with embryos developed in vivo
Abstract
Embryos from superovulated female mice that developed in vitro from the two-cell stage were compared with in vivo embryos with respect to yield of blastocytes, number and types of cells, morphology in histologic section, and DNA polymerase activities. Significantly more embryos developed into blastocytes in vitro (93%) than in vivo (18%). Inner cell mass (ICM) cells comprised approximately 30% of total cells in late morula/early blastocyst stage embryos developed either in vitro or in vivo. However, the in vitro embryos developed approximately half the number of total cells as in vivo embryos, did not develop endoderm, and did not develop abembryonic trophoblast cells with morphologic characteristics of late preimplantation in vivo embryos. DNA-dependent DNA polymerase activities in in vitro embryos decreased in correspondence with the decrease in cell number resulting in per cell levels comparable to in vivo embryos. In contrast, the poly (A).oligo(dT)-dependent DNA polymerase activity was the same in embryos developing either in vitro or in vivo, indicating different regulatory mechanisms for the two enzyme activities. A variety of nutrients and growth factors in the culture medium did not increase cell numbers or DNA polymerase activities in embryos cultured for 3 days; extending the culture an additional 24 hours resulted in a loss of ICM cells and decreases in both DNA polymerase activities. These results show that the retarded growth of embryos in vitro is equally distributed between ICM and trophoblast, is not reversed by culture conditions that include serum growth factors, and is not due to decreased cellular levels of DNA polymerase activities.
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