The potential role of endogenous triglyceride in bovine oocyte maturation and preimplantation development has been investigated. Bovine immature oocytes were recovered from abattoir-derived ovaries, matured and fertilised in vitro and the zygotes grown to the blastocyst stage in SOFaaBSA. Methyl palmoxirate (MP) blocks the oxidation of fatty acids by inhibiting mitochondrial carnitine palmitoyltransferase A. The development of zygotes exposed to MP during oocyte maturation, and of zygotes exposed to MP during embryo culture has been assessed in terms of oxygen consumption by oocytes and embryos during a 4-6 hr incubation period in the presence of MP and as blastocyst formation and cell number. Immature oocytes exposed to MP during maturation had reduced capacity to form blastocysts after fertilisation; the same effect was apparent, but to a lesser extent, in zygotes exposed to MP during embryo development. Oxygen consumption values of oocytes and blastocysts in the absence of exogenous substrates were similar to those in control medium containing nutrients. MP-inhibited oxygen consumption of immature oocytes, mature oocytes, cleavage stages embryos and blastocysts by 64, 45, 12 and 13%, respectively. The data are consistent with a role for triglyceride as a key energy source during bovine oocyte maturation and potentially, during preimplantation embryo development.
A microfluorescence technique was used to measure the triglyceride content of a minimum of two bovine oocytes or preimplantation embryos up to the hatched blastocyst stage. Embryos were produced in vitro from abattoir-derived ovaries and grown in medium containing synthetic oviductal fluid, amino acids and BSA (SOFaaBSA medium); 10% fetal calf serum was added to some of the embryos at the four-cell stage. Before maturation, the triglyceride content of oocytes was 59 +/- 1.37 ng and it decreased (P < 0.05) after maturation to 46 +/- 0.85 ng. A decrease in triglyceride content (P < 0.05) was also observed after fertilization with the formation of the two-cell embryo (34 +/- 1.80 ng). In the absence of serum, the triglyceride content remained relatively constant from the two-cell to the hatched blastocyst stage. The triglyceride content of blastocysts produced in vivo was similar (33 +/- 0.70 ng) to that of blastocysts produced in vitro in the absence of serum. In contrast, the triglyceride content of embryos grown with 10% fetal calf serum increased steadily from the 9-16-cell stage to a value in hatched blastocysts (62 +/- 1.14 ng) almost double that in serum-free conditions. These results indicate that triglyceride may act as energy source during bovine oocyte maturation and fertilization and that the presence of serum causes excessive synthesis or accumulation of triglyceride in early embryos.
Preimplantation human embryos actively take up individual fatty acids at different rates at different stages of development. The high unsaturated concentration at the later stages of development may be explained by preferential uptake of linoleic acid.
The present study examined the effects of feeding gilts a high fibre diet from the third post-pubertal oestrus until either day 19 of the same cycle or insemination at the following oestrus on oocyte maturity, embryo survival and associated changes in reproductive hormone concentrations. Gilts fed with the high fibre diet had lower circulating oestradiol concentrations on days 17, 18 and 19 of the cycle and increased LH pulse frequency on day 18. More oocytes recovered on day 19 from gilts receiving the high fibre diet were at metaphase II after 46-h culture in medium containing 10% of their own follicular fluid, despite fewer large (O7 mm) follicles in these gilts when compared with control animals. There was no effect of diet on ovulation rate, corpora lutea size or progesterone concentrations on days 10-12 after insemination, but embryo survival on days 27-29 after insemination was higher in gilts that received the high fibre diet. This study demonstrates that a high fibre diet that increases embryo survival also improves oocyte maturity and provides information on endocrine correlates that may shed light on underlying mechanisms.
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