TY - JOUR
T1 - Optimisation of the Bovine Whole In Vitro Embryo System as a Sentinel for Toxicity Screening: A Cadmium Challenge
AU - Jorssen, Ellen
AU - Vergauwen, Lucia
AU - Goossens, Karen
AU - Hagenaars, An
AU - Van Poucke, Mario
AU - Petro, Evi
AU - Peelman, Luc
AU - Knapen, Dries
AU - Leroy, Jo
AU - Bols, Peter
PY - 2015/5
Y1 - 2015/5
N2 - Developmental toxicity testing could greatly benefit from the availability of an in vitro alternative
model based on the use of animal embryos that have better human-like physiology than the currently-
used alternative models. These current models are insufficient, as extrapolation of the results can be
challenging. Therefore, an in vitro bovine embryo culture system was used to expose individual morulae to
test substances, and to study developmental characteristics up to the blastocyst stage. Cadmium was chosen
as the reference toxicant to investigate the sensitivity of the bovine morulae to various concentrations
and exposure times. Oocytes from slaughterhouse-obtained bovine ovaries, were maturated, fertilised and
cultured up until the morula stage. Morulae were exposed to different cadmium concentrations for 18 or
70 hours, and developmental competence, embryo quality and the expression of cadmium exposurerelated
genes were evaluated. Cadmium exposure hampered embryonic developmental competence and
quality. Compared with the 18-hour exposure, the 70-hour exposure induced a 20-fold higher toxic
response with regard to developmental competence and a more ‘cadmium-typical’ transcript expression.
The bovine morula might be a promising tool for toxicity testing as, following exposure, the embryos
reacted in a sensitive and ‘cadmium-typical’ manner to our reference toxicant.
AB - Developmental toxicity testing could greatly benefit from the availability of an in vitro alternative
model based on the use of animal embryos that have better human-like physiology than the currently-
used alternative models. These current models are insufficient, as extrapolation of the results can be
challenging. Therefore, an in vitro bovine embryo culture system was used to expose individual morulae to
test substances, and to study developmental characteristics up to the blastocyst stage. Cadmium was chosen
as the reference toxicant to investigate the sensitivity of the bovine morulae to various concentrations
and exposure times. Oocytes from slaughterhouse-obtained bovine ovaries, were maturated, fertilised and
cultured up until the morula stage. Morulae were exposed to different cadmium concentrations for 18 or
70 hours, and developmental competence, embryo quality and the expression of cadmium exposurerelated
genes were evaluated. Cadmium exposure hampered embryonic developmental competence and
quality. Compared with the 18-hour exposure, the 70-hour exposure induced a 20-fold higher toxic
response with regard to developmental competence and a more ‘cadmium-typical’ transcript expression.
The bovine morula might be a promising tool for toxicity testing as, following exposure, the embryos
reacted in a sensitive and ‘cadmium-typical’ manner to our reference toxicant.
KW - B350-dieren-embryologie
M3 - A1: Web of Science-artikel
VL - 43
SP - 89
EP - 100
JO - Alternatives to Lab Animals
JF - Alternatives to Lab Animals
ER -