Comprehensive analysis of karyotypic mosaicism between trophectoderm and inner cell mass
David S. JohnsonCengiz CinnioğluRobert M. RossA. N. FilbyG. GemelosMatthew D. HillAllison RyanD. SmotrichMatthew RabinowitzMichael J. Murray
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Abstract Aneuploidy has been well-documented in blastocyst embryos, but prior studies have been limited in scale and/or lack mechanistic data. We previously reported preclinical validation of microarray 24-chromosome preimplantation genetic screening in a 24-h protocol. The method diagnoses chromosome copy number, structural chromosome aberrations, parental source of aneuploidy and distinguishes certain meiotic from mitotic errors. In this study, our objective was to examine aneuploidy in human blastocysts and determine correspondence of karyotypes between trophectoderm (TE) and inner cell mass (ICM). We disaggregated 51 blastocysts from 17 couples into ICM and one or two TE fractions. The average maternal age was 31. Next, we ran 24-chromosome microarray molecular karyotyping on all of the samples, and then performed a retrospective analysis of the data. The average per-chromosome confidence was 99.95%. Approximately 80% of blastocysts were euploid. The majority of aneuploid embryos were simple aneuploid, i.e. one or two whole-chromosome imbalances. Structural chromosome aberrations, which are common in cleavage stage embryos, occurred in only three blastocysts (5.8%). All TE biopsies derived from the same embryos were concordant. Forty-nine of 51 (96.1%) ICM samples were concordant with TE biopsies derived from the same embryos. Discordance between TE and ICM occurred only in the two embryos with structural chromosome aberration. We conclude that TE karyotype is an excellent predictor of ICM karyotype. Discordance between TE and ICM occurred only in embryos with structural chromosome aberrations.Keywords:
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The aim of this study was to evaluate the developmental kinetics of cats' blastocysts in connection with their morphology and blastomeres allocation to trophoblast or embryoblast cells. We examined gross blastocyst morphology and the total number of blastomeres together with its allocation to inner cell mass (ICM) or trophectoderm (TE) cells in pre-implantation feline embryos obtained from 6th to 9th day of in vitro culture. From all the investigated embryos, 61.8% developed to early blastocyst, 37.4% to full and 7.6% to hatching blastocyst stage. The total cell number (TCN) varied form 58 cells in early day 6 to 245 in hatching day 8 blastocyst, with the mean 84.9 cells in early, 156.7 in full, and 204.4 in hatching ones. Day 8 blastocyst had the highest number of total cells, together with the highest mean number of ICM regardless of its morphological assessment. Early blastocyst (apart from day 6) had the highest number of arrested cells, while dead cells were the highest in full day 9 blastocyst. More data about the relationship between blastocyst development and morphology would facilitate the selection of optimal blastocysts for further procedures.
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The expanded blastocysts, developed from 2PN-stage embryos, are generally divided into three categories: a good blastocyst containing a large and distinguishable inner cell mass (ICM), a blastocyst with a small and distinct ICM, and a blastocyst with a poorly defined ICM. In this study, we introduce methods for the derivation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) depending on the quality of the blastocysts. An immunosurgical method was used for the good expanded blastocysts. This method, however, raises the probability of ICM loss in cases of hESC derivation from blastocysts with smaller or indistinct ICMs. Furthermore, this method is also associated with a risk of the contamination of the hESCs with animal pathogens. To overcome these shortcomings, the partial- or whole-embryo culture method was used. For blastocysts with no visible ICM, the whole-embryo culture method was used to establish hESCs via the seeding of the entire blastocyst without its zona pellucida directly on a STO feeder layer. However, trophectodermal overgrowth tends to hinder the expansion of the ICM during the initial steps of hESC derivation. Therefore, the partial-embryo culture method was developed to establish hESCs from blastocysts with smaller ICMs. The surgical isolation of the region containing the ICM with an ultra-fine glass pipette alleviates trophectoderm overgrowth. This method is also applicable to blastocysts with large and distinct ICMs, and the efficiency of this method is comparable to that of the immunosurgical method.
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Noninvasive measurements of bovine embryo quality, such as timing of cleavage, morula morphology, blastocyst formation, and hatching ability, were linked with the number of inner cell mass (ICM) cells and trophectoderm (TE) cells of the resulting embryos. First, it was confirmed that fast-cleaving embryos proved to have significantly higher chances to reach advanced developmental stages vs. intermediate and slow cleavers (P = 0.01). They also showed significantly less fragmentation at the morula stage, implying the presence of more excellent morulae among fast-cleaving embryos (P < 0.05). Second, the quality of hatched blastocysts, resulting from morulae of different morphological grades, was examined by differential staining. The total cell and ICM cell numbers were significantly lower for hatched blastocysts developed from poor morulae compared to hatched blastocysts developed from excellent, good, or fair morulae. However, hatched blastocysts with <10 ICM cells were seen in embryos belonging to all four morphological scores. Finally, it was found that timing of first cleavage was not significantly correlated with timing of blastocyst formation or with cell number of blastocysts. Timing of blastocyst formation, however, was significantly correlated with cell number: day 8 blastocysts had significantly lower total cell and ICM cell numbers than day 6 and day 7 blastocysts (P < 0.001). These results suggest that the quality of in vitro-produced bovine embryos is very variable and cannot be linked with a single criterion such as embryo morphology and/or hatching ability. Timing of blastocyst formation was the most valuable criterion with regard to embryonic differentiation. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 47:47–56, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Noninvasive measurements of bovine embryo quality, such as timing of cleavage, morula morphology, blastocyst formation, and hatching ability, were linked with the number of inner cell mass (ICM) cells and trophectoderm (TE) cells of the resulting embryos. First, it was confirmed that fast-cleaving embryos proved to have significantly higher chances to reach advanced developmental stages vs. intermediate and slow cleavers (P = 0.01). They also showed significantly less fragmentation at the morula stage, implying the presence of more excellent morulae among fast-cleaving embryos (P < 0.05). Second, the quality of hatched blastocysts, resulting from morulae of different morphological grades, was examined by differential staining. The total cell and ICM cell numbers were significantly lower for hatched blastocysts developed from poor morulae compared to hatched blastocysts developed from excellent, good, or fair morulae. However, hatched blastocysts with <10 ICM cells were seen in embryos belonging to all four morphological scores. Finally, it was found that timing of first cleavage was not significantly correlated with timing of blastocyst formation or with cell number of blastocysts. Timing of blastocyst formation, however, was significantly correlated with cell number: day 8 blastocysts had significantly lower total cell and ICM cell numbers than day 6 and day 7 blastocysts (P < 0.001). These results suggest that the quality of in vitro-produced bovine embryos is very variable and cannot be linked with a single criterion such as embryo morphology and/or hatching ability. Timing of blastocyst formation was the most valuable criterion with regard to embryonic differentiation. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 47:47–56, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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