Preimplantation embryos may be cryopreserved after placement into a hypertonic cryoprotective solution to cause cellular dehydration. After equilibration, ice crystal formation is induced in the solution surrounding the embryo. Further dehydration occurs as the embryo is slowly cooled to subzero temperatures before plunging into liquid nitrogen for storage.
Preimplantation embryos from cattle, sheep, and goats may be cryopreserved for short- or long-term storage. Preimplantation embryos consist predominantly of water, and the avoidance of intracellular ice crystal formation during the cryopreservation process is of paramount importance to maintain embryo viability. Embryos are placed into a hypertonic solution (1.4 – 1.5 M) of a cryoprotective agent (CPA) such as ethylene glycol (EG) or glycerol (GLYC) to create an osmotic gradient that facilitates cellular dehydration. After embryos reach osmotic equilibrium in the CPA solution, they are individually loaded in the hypertonic CPA solution into 0.25 ml plastic straws for freezing. Embryos are placed into a controlled rate freezer at a temperature of -6°C. Ice crystal formation is induced in the CPA solution surrounding the embryo, and crystallization causes an increase in the concentration of CPA outside of the embryo, causing further cellular dehydration. Embryos are cooled at a rate of 0.5°C/min, enabling further dehydration, to a temperature of -34°C before being plunged into liquid nitrogen (-196°C). Cryopreserved embryos must be thawed prior to transfer to a recipient (surrogate) female. Straws containing the embryos are removed from the liquid nitrogen dewar, held in room temperature air for 3 to 5 sec, and placed into a 37°C water bath for 25 to 30 sec. Embryos cryopreserved in GLYC are placed into a 1 M solution of sucrose for 10 min for removal of the CPA before transfer to a recipient (surrogate) female. Embryos cryopreserved in EG, however, may be directly transferred to the uterus of a recipient.
1. Evaluating Suitability of Embryos for Cryopreservation1
2. Washing Embryos to Reduce Likelihood of Disease Transmission2
3. Dehydrating Embryos Prior to Cryopreservation3
4. Loading Embryos into a 0.25 ml Plastic Straw for Cryopreservation
5. Placing Embryos into a Controlled Rate Embryo Freezing Machine
6. Seeding
7. Continuing Dehydration of Embryos
8. Thawing Cryopreserved Embryos
9. Representative Results:
A variety of factors may influence the pregnancy and live birth rates resulting from the transfer of frozen-thawed preimplantation embryos to synchronous recipient females5. Embryos at developmental stages less advanced than compact morula or more advanced than expanded blastocyst often do not survive the cryopreservation process as well as embryos at the compact morula, early blastocyst, blastocyst, and expanded blastocyst stages of embryonic development. Embryos of quality grade 1 and 2 yield higher post-thaw pregnancy rates than do quality grade 3 embryos (which typically are not cryopreserved due to the low post-thaw pregnancy rates). Embryos mishandled during the embryo freezing or embryo thawing procedures are likely to exhibit reduced pregnancy rates. Embryos transferred to recipient females whose estrous cycles are not synchronized with that of the donor female typically produce lower pregnancy rates. Embryos produced in vitro or manipulated in some manner (e.g., biopsied or bisected) usually yield lower pregnancy rates. Under optimal conditions, pregnancy rates obtained after transfer of frozen-thawed in vivo derived embryos is typically 60-70% in cattle6,7, 65-75% in sheep8,9,10,11, and 60-70% in goats12,13,14,15. Similarly, pregnancy rates obtained after transfer of frozen-thawed in vitro produced embryos is typically 40-50% in cattle6,16, 25-35% in sheep17, and 30-40% in goats18.
Table 1. Expected pregnancy rates following transfer of frozen-thawed embryos from domestic ruminant livestock species to synchronous recipient females.
Because embryos consist predominantly of water, it is crucial that preimplantation embryos be adequately dehydrated and slowly cooled in accordance with the protocol described herein to avoid intracellular ice crystal formation. Once the cooling process has begun, it is important to maintain unidirectional temperature change and to avoid temperature fluctuations. Initiation of ice crystal formation (“seeding”) at an appropriate temperature for the specific CPA solution is critical.
Modifications to this slow cooling/rapid thawing method for preimplantation embryo cryopreservation include the one-step method (where the last column of medium loaded into the straw is sucrose instead of CPA solution)19 and the direct transfer method (where embryos frozen in ethylene glycol are thawed and transferred directly to the uterus of a recipient female without first removing the ethylene glycol from the embryo)20. To reduce the volume of ethylene glycol deposited into the uterus of a direct transfer (DT) recipient female, it is advisable to fill the 0.25 ml straw with 6 cm holding medium before continuing as described previously. It should be noted that a voluntary standard exists within the commercial embryo transfer industry that preimplantation embryos cryopreserved for DT should be frozen in yellow-colored straws and stored in yellow-colored goblets in the liquid nitrogen dewar. The commercial industry also has specific labeling requirements for all cryopreserved embryos that should be followed.
One alternative to this method is vitrification21, a non-equilibrium method of cryopreservation where a more highly concentrated (6-8 M) CPA solution is cooled ultra-rapidly causing the CPA solution to change from liquid to a “glassy” state without ice crystal formation. Vitrification is likely better suited for cryopreservation of embryos that are less developmentally advanced than compact morula due to their increased temperature sensitivity.
This technique has application for preservation of unique germplasm resources22, as well as to the international commercial embryo transfer industry where more than 55% of approximately 500,000 bovine preimplantation embryos transferred in calendar year 2008 were cryopreserved.23
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Partial funding from the USDA multi-state research project W-2171 “Germ Cell and Embryo Development and Manipulation for the Improvement of Livestock” is gratefully acknowledged. The artistic talents of Ryan Callahan, who prepared the technical illustrations for the video portion of this article, are also gratefully acknowledged.
Name of the reagent | Company | Catalog number | Comments (optional) |
---|---|---|---|
BioLife freeze medium | Agtech, Inc. | C18, C18A | 1.5 M ethylene glycol |
Emcare ethylene glycol freeze solution | ICPBio Reproduction | IC8, IC10 | 1.5 M ethylene glycol |
ViGro ethylene glycol freeze plus | Bioniche Animal Health | EVM835 | 1.5 M ethylene glycol |
Emcare 10% glycerol freeze solution | ICPBio Reproduction | IC12 | 1.34 M glycerol |
Emcare 1 M sucrose thaw | ICPBio Reproduction | IC16 | 1.0 M sucrose |
ViGro one-step thaw | Bioniche Animal Health | EVM247, EVM847 | 1.0 M sucrose |
ViGro thaw 1-2-3 plus | Bioniche Animal Health | EVM248, EVM848 | 5%, 2.5%, 0% glycerol with 0.5, 0.5, 0.6% sucrose |
Emcare CSU thawing kit | ICPBio Reproduction | IC20 | 6%, 3%, 0% glycerol with 10.3% sucrose |
BioLife holding and transfer medium | Agtech, Inc. | C15, C15A | modified PBS with 0.4% BSA (bovine serum albumin) |
Emcare holding solution | ICPBio Reproduction | IC2, IC4, IC6 | 0.4% BSA (bovine serum albumin), MOPS buffer (inert zwitterions) |
ViGro holding plus | Bioniche Animal Health | EVM024, EVM824 | |
SYNGRO Holding medium | Bioniche Animal Health | ESM024, ESM224, ESM828 | contains hyaluronan; no products of animal origin |
BioLife modified D- PBS | Agtech, Inc. | C06 | modified Dulbecco’s phosphate buffered saline |
BioLife BSA Fraction V | Agtech, Inc. | B09 | lyophilized bovine serum albumin, fraction V |
BioLife antibiotic-antimycotic | Agtech, Inc. | B01 | amphotericin-B, penicillin G, streptomycin sulfate |
BioLife trypsin kit | Agtech, Inc. | C22A | 25 g lyophilized trypsin, sterile water, sterile D-PBS |
Name of the equipment | Company | Catalog number | Comments (optional) |
---|---|---|---|
Biol-Cool controlled rate freezer | FTS Systems | BC-IV -40 | Methanol bath freezer |
Freeze Control controlled rate freezer | Cryologic | CL2200 | Liquid nitrogen freezer |