Abstract
Almost 30 years after the first successful in vitro fertilization (IVF) in golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus), we report that IVF hamster embryos can develop in a chemically defined, protein-free culture medium into morulae and blastocysts, and produce normal offspring after transfer to recipients. When examined 96 h post-insemination, 82% (160/200) of IVF ova had cleaved to at least 2 cells, 55% (97/200) had developed beyond the 4-cell stage, and 22% (38/200) had developed into morulae/blastocysts. In vitro development of IVF embryos to greater than or equal to 8 cells was absolutely dependent on hypotaurine. Twenty living offspring were produced from transfer of IVF embryos to recipients, with an overall success rate of 5% and 17% for oviductal (2-cell) and uterine (8-cell/morulae) transfers, respectively. In vivo-fertilized pronucleate embryos collected 3 h after egg activation were less able to develop in vitro than embryos collected only 6 h later, revealing a critical influence of the oviduct within the first hours of embryo development. Hypotaurine partly compensated for the decreased oviductal exposure of early 1-cell embryos. Establishment of a key role for hypotaurine in hamster embryo development, support of IVF embryos to morula/blastocyst stages in vitro, and production of living offspring after IVF embryo transfer are significant steps towards the goal of obtaining comparative data on preimplantation embryogenesis.