Abstract

The effects of supplementation of synthetic culture media with different energy and protein sources on in vitro development of pig embryos beyond the 4–8-cell stage have been explored. Minimal Essential Medium (MEM) supplemented with glucose (1 mg/ml) proved superior to Krebs-Ringer Bicarbonate (KRB) supplemented with glucose (1 mg/ml) in its capacity to support embryonic development to the expanded blastocyst stage ( P < 0.05). Inclusion of pyruvate (0.25 m M) or lactate (25 m M) in either MEM or KRB based media inhibited embryonic development. As pyruvate and lactate are important and readily utilizable energy sources for development of most other mammalian embryos in vitro, it is suggested that the observed inhibitory effects of these substrates reflect comparatively lower critical ranges of concentrations of pyruvate and lactate for optimum development of pig embryos in vitro. As a supplementary protein source to MEM, heat inactivated (HI) human serum (10% υ/υ) was superior ( P < 0.05) to HI-pig serum (10% υ/υ), HI-foetal calf serum (10% υ/υ) or bovine serum albumin (5 mg/ml). The proportion of 4–8-cell pig embryos which developed beyond hatching in MEM supplemented with HI-human serum (> 56%) was higher than any other reported for in vitro culture of pig embryos through the same developmental period and this medium is recommended for future studies on in vitro development of pig embryos from the four-cell through the hatched/expanded blastocyst stages.

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