Abstract
Relative to alanine and serine amino acid levels, glutamine is highly abundant in follicular fluid, and is an important source of energy required for oocyte maturation and embryo development. Thus, glutamine is an essential component of in vitro embryo culture media. However, glutamine has poor stability and degrades spontaneously in solution to form ammonia and pyrrolidonecarboxylic acid. In the present study, we aimed to explore the effect of substituting l-glutamine with glycine-glutamine, a more stable glutamine, on development of early parthenogenetic embryos and in vitro fertilization (IVF) embryos in bovine. Results revealed that glycine-glutamine can significantly increase cleavage rate (parthenogenetic embryos:87.24% vs. 72.61%, IVF embryos:89.33% vs. 83.79%, P < 0.01), blastocyst number (parthenogenetic embryos:24.98% vs. 18.07%, IVF embryos:33.53% vs. 27.29%, P < 0.01), and blastocyst number (parthenogenetic embryos:96 vs. 76, IVF embryos:114 vs. 109, P < 0.01), reduce blastocyst apoptosis (parthenogenetic embryos:3.72% vs. 6.65%, IVF embryos:2.53% vs.6.23%, P < 0.01), alleviate embryo ammonia toxicity, and reduce the content of reactive oxygen species (ROS) compared with the l-glutamine. In addition, glycine-glutamine can alter epigenetic reprogramming by increasing the expression of HDAC1 (Histone Deacetylase 1) and decreasing the relative expression levels of H3K9 acetylation in early parthenogenetic embryos and IVF embryos. From our present study, we concluded that glycine-glutamine is an effective substitute of glutamine in modified synthetic oviduct fluid with amino acids (mSOFaa).
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