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Control of Pig Reproduction II

Control of Pig Reproduction II

Manipulation of The Embryo

bp0012cpr7 | Manipulation of The Embryo | CPR1985

How does embryo manipulationfit into present and future pig reproduction?

Polge C. ,

Summary. Available techniques for the collection and direct transplantation of pig embryos are simple and efficient and could be used for the expansion of new lines, for increasing selection pressure in nucleus herds and for extracting healthy stock from a diseased source. However, the reduced viability of pig embryos during culture in vitro and the inability as yet to preserve them by deep-freezing impose limits to the use of embryo transplantat...

bp0012cpr8 | Manipulation of The Embryo | CPR1985

Manipulation of gametes and embryosin the pig

Robl J. M. , First N. L. ,

Summary. Several manipulation techniques including nuclear injections, nuclear transplantation, embryo splitting, chimaera production and sperm injection are discussed with special reference to their application in the pig. The nuclear injection technique is likely to be of greatest use for gene transfer. Gene transfer is feasible for pig embryos. but it is very inefficient. Efficiencies of various steps in the successful production of transgenic offsprin...

bp0012cpr9 | Manipulation of The Embryo | CPR1985

Culture and storage of pig embryos

Davis D. L. ,

Summary. Studies have consistently demonstrated that 4-cell pig embryos can be cultured to the blastocyst stage in a simple salt solution containing bovine serum albumin (BSA). Pig embryos appear to be detrimentally affected by lower levels of lactate and pyruvate than are mouse embryos, but in general their in-vitro requirements are similar. Results from embryos cultured between the 4-cell and blastocyst stages are consistent enough to allow the use of c...