Abstract
A comparison has been made of various aspects of preimplantation development of mouse and human embryos in vitro. Changes in substrate utilization follow similar patterns in both species. This similarity in metabolic parameters between the two species has facilitated the use of the mouse as a model to study the formulation of culture media to be used at different stages over the preimplantation period from fertilization to the fully expanded blastocyst stage. It has also prescribed the mouse embryo as a practical tool for quality control testing of the laboratory system in human in-vitro fertilization. Aspects of the physiology of both species that require further study are the physiological levels of endogenous inorganic phosphate in the female reproductive tract, the requirement for inorganic phosphate in culture medium, the specificity of the amino acid requirements for optimal development before and after compaction and the importance of including EDTA in culture medium.
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