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- Title
Effect of recipient breed on delivery rate of cloned miniature pig.
- Authors
Ok Jae Koo; Hee Jung Park; Dae Kee Kwon; Jung Taek Kang; Goo Jang; Byeong Chun Lee
- Abstract
The miniature pig is regarded as a better organ donor breed for xenotransplantation than other pig breeds because the size of their organs is similar to that of humans. To improve efficiency of cloned miniature pig production, we analysed the effect of breed difference between donor cells and embryo recipients on pregnancy rate and delivery rate. Cloned porcine embryos derived from domestic or miniature pig donor cells were transferred to domestic or miniature recipient pigs. Delivery rate was significantly higher when embryos reconstructed with miniature pig donor cells were transferred to miniature pig recipients as compared with that of embryos transferred to domestic pig recipients. However, pregnancy rates were similar between the two groups. The breed of donor cells, but not of embryo recipients, seems likely to affect litter size. From a 13 610 gene cDNA microarray, 1551 (11.7%) genes showed significantly different levels of expression between the fetuses of the two breeds. Vascular endothelial growth factor and c-kit ligand genes related to implantation and maintenance of pregnancy were significantly downregulated in miniature pigs. In conclusion, the differential gene expression in fetuses interferes with proper fetal/maternal interactions, and results in late-stage pregnancy loss. Our results indicate that the miniature pig is the preferred embryo recipient breed than domestic pig for producing cloned miniature piglets.
- Subjects
CLONING; MINIATURE pigs; GENETIC engineering; EMBRYO transfer; VASCULAR endothelial growth factors; EMBRYOLOGY
- Publication
Zygote, 2009, Vol 17, Issue 3, p203
- ISSN
0967-1994
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S0967199409005267