C
C.E. Pope
Researcher at Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden
Publications - 10
Citations - 214
C.E. Pope is an academic researcher from Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intracytoplasmic sperm injection & Transgene. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 10 publications receiving 206 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Successful in vitro and in vivo development of in vitro fertilized two- to four-cell cat embryos following cryopreservation, culture and transfer.
TL;DR: Most 2- to 4-cell cat embryos retained their capability for in vitro development to morula/blastocyst, and in vivo viability was demonstrated by the birth of 3 live kittens to 2 of 4 recipients following the transfer of 58 embryos.
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Birth of a western lowland gorilla (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) following in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer.
C.E. Pope,Betsy L. Dresser,Betsy L. Dresser,Betsy L. Dresser,Neeoo W. Chin,James H. Liu,Naida M. Loskutoff,Erica J. Behnke,Corrine Brown,Molly A. McRae,Charles E. Sinoway,Mark Campbell,Kenneth Cameron,O'Dell M. Owens,Chad A. Johnson,Ronald R. Evans,Marcelle I. Cedars +16 more
TL;DR: A 21‐year‐old multiparous female exhibiting 31–41 day menstrual cycles was given hFSH and hCG to stimulate follicular development and revealed a single fetus at 15 weeks p.t., and unassisted delivery of a live 1.37 kg female infant occurred at 29 weeks.
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Generation of domestic transgenic cloned kittens using lentivirus vectors.
Martha C. Gómez,C.E. Pope,Robert H. Kutner,David M. Ricks,Leslie A. Lyons,Mark T. Ruhe,C. Dumas,Justine I. Lyons,Betsy L. Dresser,Jakob Reiser,Jakob Reiser +10 more
TL;DR: The birth of transgenic cloned kittens produced by LV vector-mediated transduction of donor cells are reported and it is confirmed thatCloned kittens express the EGFP reporter transgene in all body tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI
In vitro fertilization in the domestic cat ( ): A comparison between freshly collected and cooled semen
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Chromosomal aneuploidy in African Wildcat somatic cells and cloned embryos.
TL;DR: The overall incidence of chromosomal abnormalities in AWC-NT embryos at P1, P3, and P4 was similar to that of the fibroblast cells from which they were derived; however, the incidence was higher for embryos reconstructed with donor fibroblasts at P9, which was the most common chromosomal abnormality.