Radical solutions and cultural problems: Could free oxygen radicals be responsible for the impaired development of preimplantation mammalian embryos in vitro?
- 1 January 1994
- Vol. 16 (1), 31-38
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.950160105
Abstract
A major obstacel to the study of mammalian development, and to the practical application of knowledge gained from it in the clinic during therapeutic in vitro fertilisation and embryo transfer (IVF‐ET), is the propensity of embryos to become retarded or arrested during their culture in vitro. The precise developmental cell cycle in which embryos arrest or delay is characteristic for the species and coincides with the earliest period of embryonic gene expression. Much evidence reviewed here implicates free oxygen radicals (FORs) in the process of arrest. Thus, studies on the development of mouse preimplantation embryos in vitro have shown that (i) FORs are elevated in vitro, but not in vivo, at the time at which embryos become arrested or delayed, (ii) systems for removing reactive oxygen species to limit the formation of hydroxy radicals are present, although they have not yet been assessed quantitatively and may differ qualitatively from those in adult cells, (iii) metabolic and possibly genetic adaptations to oxidative damage are evident, (iv) published procedures for overcoming in vitro arrest are explicable in terms of FOR‐mediated damage or responses and (v) the arrest or delay of most embryos in vitro can be reduced or prevented experimentally by addition of metal chelators to limit hydroxy radical formation and lipid hydroperoxidation.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cell-cycle control of a large-conductance K+ channel in mouse early embryosNature, 1993
- Addition of superoxide dismutase and catalase does not necessarily overcome developmental retardation of one-cell mouse embryos during in-vitro cultureReproduction, Fertility and Development, 1992
- Purines inhibit the development of mouse embryos in vitroReproduction, 1990
- Lipoproteins secreted by cultured rat hepatocytes contain the antioxidant 1-alk-1-enyl-2-acylglycerophosphoethanolamineBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1990
- The role of iron in oxygen radical mediated lipid peroxidationChemico-Biological Interactions, 1989
- Mouse Zygote Development in Culture Medium without Protein in the Presence of Ethylenediaminetetraacetic Acid1Biology of Reproduction, 1989
- Changes in the levels of superoxide anion radical and superoxide dismutase during the estrous cycle of Rattusnorvegicus and induction of superoxide dismutase in rat ovary by lutropinBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1988
- A method for removal of trace iron contamination from biological buffersFEBS Letters, 1987
- Expression of the mouse HPRT gene: Deletional analysis of the promoter region of an X-Chromosome linked housekeeping geneCell, 1985
- Regulation of glutamine and pyruvate oxidation in cultured adrenocortical cells by cortisol, antioxidants, and oxygen: Effects on cell proliferationJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1981