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 7 d post-fertilization were exposed (for 2 h) to 2 × 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 ≤6.62 ± 1.57 copies/5 μL; 90% of the contaminated embryos had ≤4.64 ± 1.57 viral copies/5 μL of embryo-associated virus, using tolerance intervals ( P < 0.05). The SEM was 0.33 and the mean of averages was 1.12/5 μL. 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 ≤3.44 ± 0.89 copies/5 μL; 90% of the contaminated embryos had ≤2.40 ± 0.89 viral copies/5 μL 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 μL). 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.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call