Abstract

The present study aims to analyze the cause-effect relationships among several in-vitro fertilization and pre-implantation embryo development variables in the mouse. Superovulation of hybrid (C57Bl/6JIco female X CBA/JIco male) female mice of 4-6 weeks of age was induced by a priming injection of pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin at the estrus stage of the estrous cycle followed after a 48-hr interval by human chrorionic gonadotropin. Ovulated cumulus-enclosed oocytes were inseminated with sperm from hybrid males of 12-16 weeks of age. The multiple linear regression analyses performed indicated that (a) total number of ovulated oocytes is a good predictor of both fertilization frequency and total number of cells in day-5 blastocysts; (b) fertilization frequency predicts percentage of day-5 blastocysts; (c) total number of cells in day-5 blastocysts is predicted by percentage of day-5 blastocysts; and (d) total number of cells in day-5 blastocysts predicts percentage of apoptotic cells, number of inner cell mass (ICM) and trophectoderm (TE) cells, and ICM/TE ratio in day-5 blastocysts. Mitotic index in day-5 blastocysts was positively correlated with total number of ovulated oocytes, percentage of ovulated cumulus-enclosed oocytes, fertilization frequency, percentage of day-5 blastocysts and total number of cells in day-5 blastocysts. On the contrary, it was negatively correlated with percentage of apoptotic cells in day-5 blastocysts.

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