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. 2009 May;71(8):1238-44.
doi: 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2009.01.005. Epub 2009 Feb 26.

Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) associated with single in vivo-derived and in vitro-produced preimplantation bovine embryos following artificial exposure

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Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) associated with single in vivo-derived and in vitro-produced preimplantation bovine embryos following artificial exposure

J A Gard et al. Theriogenology. 2009 May.

Abstract

The objective was to determine the average amount of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) associated with single in vivo-derived and in vitro-produced bovine embryos following recommended processing procedures for embryos. In vivo-derived and in vitro-produced bovine embryos at 7d post-fertilization were exposed (for 2h) to 2 x 10(5-7) cell culture infective dose (CCID(50))/mL of SD-1 (a noncytopathic, Type 1a strain of BVDV), and then washed according to International Embryo Transfer Society (IETS) guidelines prior to testing. Of the 87 in vivo-derived embryos tested, 27% were positive for virus by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). The range in amount of virus associated with 99% of the contaminated embryos was <or=6.62+/-1.57 copies/5 microL; 90% of the contaminated embryos had <or=4.64+/-1.57 viral copies/5 microL of embryo-associated virus, using tolerance intervals (P<0.05). The SEM was 0.33 and the mean of averages was 1.12/5 microL. Of the 87 in vitro-produced embryos, 42% were positive for virus. The range in amount of virus associated with 99% of the contaminated embryos was <or=3.44+/-0.89 copies/5 microL; 90% of the contaminated embryos had <or=2.40+/-0.89 viral copies/5 microL of embryo-associated virus using tolerance intervals (P<0.05; S.E.M. was 0.14 and the mean of averages was 0.55/5 microL). Therefore, although many embryos were positive for virus, there were limited numbers of copies, thereby posing doubt regarding their potential for contamination following embryo transfer.

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