Abstract

To increase our understanding of rat embryos in culture and to attempt the isolation of blastocyst-derived cell lines, we examined the initial growth behaviour of rat blastocysts from four strains of rat on four different feeder cell layers. The feeders used were a continuous cell line of murine embryonic fibroblasts (STO), primary mouse (MEF) or primary rat (REF) embryonic fibroblasts, and a continuous cell line of rat uterine epithelial cells (RUCs). A medium that gave optimum plating efficiencies for murine ES cells was used in the rat embryo culture. Each culture system allowed hatching and attachment of the blastocysts, that is, the behaviour was similar on each feeder and each strain for the first 2 days in culture. Subsequently, there was a rapid differentiation of the Inner Cell Mass (ICM) cells on fibroblastic feeder cell layers (STO > MEF > REF), and this was generally complete after 3-6 days in primary culture. On RUCs, the ICM was found to increase in size without differentiation up to and including day 4 and in some cases longer. Embryo-derived cells were obtained by disaggregating and passaging ICMs on REF and RUC feeders. Rounded, refractile, and epithelial-like cells were isolated on REF and colonies of ES-like cells on the RUCs. The ES-like cells were positive for expression of alkaline phosphatase and stage-specific embryonic-antigen 1. This is an important first step towards the derivation and culture of pluripotent ES cells from the rat.

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