Structural aspects of the bovine zona pellucida (ZP) of in vitro-matured (IVM) oocytes and in vitro-produced (IVP) embryos were studied in two experiments to find a tentative explanation for the zona's barrier function against viral infection. In Experiment 1, the ultrastructure of the outer ZP surface was studied. The diameter (nm) and the number of the outer pores within an area of 5000 microm(2) of 10 IVM oocytes, 10 zygotes, 10 8-cell-stage embryos, and 10 morulae were evaluated by scanning electron microscopy. In oocytes and morulae, the ZP surface showed a rough and spongy appearance with numerous pores. In zygotes, the ZP surface was found to have a smooth, melted appearance with only a few pores. In 8-cell-stage embryos, both surface patterns were found. The mean number (per 5000 microm(2)) and the mean diameter of the outer pores were different between the four stages of development (P < 0.001): 1511 pores in oocytes, 1187 in zygotes, 1658 in 8-cell-stage embryos, and 3259 in morulae, with mean diameters of 182, 223, 203, and 155 nm, respectively. In Experiment 2, the continuity of the meshes (network of pores) towards the embryonic cells was examined by confocal laser scanning microscopy. Therefore, the passage through and the location in the ZP of fluorescent microspheres, with similar dimensions as bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV, 40-50 nm) and bovine herpesvirus-1 (BHV-1; 180-200 nm), were evaluated. For all stages, the smallest beads were detected halfway through the thickness of the ZP, whereas the beads with a size of 200 nm were found only within the outer-fourth part of the ZP. It can be concluded that the intact ZP of bovine IVM oocytes and IVP embryos are constructed in such a way that BVDV and BHV-1 should not be able to traverse the ZP and reach the embryonic cells. However, the risk exists that viral particles can be trapped in the outer layers of the ZP.
Noninvasive measurements of bovine embryo quality, such as timing of cleavage, morula morphology, blastocyst formation, and hatching ability, were linked with the number of inner cell mass (ICM) cells and trophectoderm (TE) cells of the resulting embryos. First, it was confirmed that fast-cleaving embryos proved to have significantly higher chances to reach advanced developmental stages vs. intermediate and slow cleavers (P = 0.01). They also showed significantly less fragmentation at the morula stage, implying the presence of more excellent morulae among fast-cleaving embryos (P < 0.05). Second, the quality of hatched blastocysts, resulting from morulae of different morphological grades, was examined by differential staining. The total cell and ICM cell numbers were significantly lower for hatched blastocysts developed from poor morulae compared to hatched blastocysts developed from excellent, good, or fair morulae. However, hatched blastocysts with < 10 ICM cells were seen in embryos belonging to all four morphological scores. Finally, it was found that timing of first cleavage was not significantly correlated with timing of blastocyst formation or with cell number of blastocysts. Timing of blastocyst formation, however, was significantly correlated with cell number: day 8 blastocysts had significantly lower total cell and ICM cell numbers than day 6 and day 7 blastocysts (P < 0.001). These results suggest that the quality of in vitro-produced bovine embryos is very variable and cannot be linked with a single criterion such as embryo morphology and/or hatching ability. Timing of blastocyst formation was the most valuable criterion with regard to embryonic differentiation.
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