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Improved assessment of frozen/thawed mouse spermatozoa using fluorescence microscopy
Authors:Ann-Kathrin Diercks  Heinrich F B��rgers  Anna Schwab  Johannes Schenkel
Institution:1Cryopreservation W430, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), 69120 Heidelberg, Germany.;2Institute of Physiology and Pathophysiology, Heidelberg University, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
Abstract:Genetically modified (GM) animals are unique mutants with an enormous scientific potential. Cryopreservation of pre-implantation embryos or spermatozoa is a common approach for protecting these lines from being lost or to store them in a repository. A mutant line can be taken out of a breeding nucleus only if sufficient numbers of samples with an appropriate level of quality are cryopreserved. The quality of different donors within the same mouse line might be heterogeneous and the cryopreservation procedure might also be error-prone. However, only limited amounts of material are available for analysis. To improve the monitoring of frozen/thawed spermatozoa, commonly used in vitro fertilization (IVF) followed by embryo transfer were replaced with animal-free techniques. Major factors for assessing spermatozoa quality (i.e., density, viability, motility, and morphology) were evaluated by fluorescence microscopy. For this, a live/dead cell staining protocol requiring only small amounts of material was created. Membrane integrity was then examined as major parameter closely correlated with successful IVF. These complex analyses allow us to monitor frozen/thawed spermatozoa from GM mice using a relatively simple staining procedure. This approach leads to a reduction of animal experiments and contributes to the 3R principles (replacement, reduction and refinement of animal experiments).
Keywords:cryopreservation  fluorescence microscopy  genetically modified (GM) mice  membrane integrity  3Rs
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