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N. L. First

Bio: N. L. First is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sperm & Cloning. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications receiving 2040 citations. Previous affiliations of N. L. First include W. R. Grace and Company & University of Southern California.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A procedure to obtain high and repeatable fertilization frequencies for bovine in vitro fertilization (IVF) with frozen-thawed sperm was developed and Heparin was the most important factor in increasing IVF frequencies.

1,165 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Nuclear transfer was evaluated in early porcine embryos and a single piglet was born after the transfer of a 4-cell nucleus to an enucleated, activated metaphase II oocyte and subsequent in vivo development.
Abstract: Nuclear transfer was evaluated in early porcine embryos. Pronuclear stage embryos were centrifuged, treated with cytoskeletal inhibitors, and subsequently enucleated. Pronuclei containing karyoplasts were placed in the perivitelline space of the enucleated zygote and fused to the enucleated zygote with electrofusion. The resulting pronuclear exchange embryos were either monitored for cleavage in vitro (9/13 cleaved and contained 2 nuclei after 24 h, 69%) or for in vivo development. In vivo development after 3 days resulted in 14/15 (93%) of the embryos transferred cleaving to the greater than or equal to 4-cell stage and after 7 days 6/16 (38%) reaching the expanded blastocyst stage. A total of 56 pronuclear exchange embryos were allowed to go to term, and 7 piglets were born. A similar manipulation procedure was used to transfer 2-, 4- or 8-cell nuclei to enucleated, activated meiotic metaphase II oocytes. Enucleation was effective in 74% (36/49) of the contemporary oocytes. Activation was successful in 81% (37/46) of nonmanipulated but pulsed oocytes versus 13% (4/31) of control oocytes (p less than 0.01). After 6 days in vivo, 9% (1/11) of the 2-cell nuclei, 8% (7/83) of the 4-cell nuclei, and 19% (11/57) of the 8-cell nuclei transferred to enucleated, activated meiotic metaphase II oocytes resulted in development to the compact morula or blastocyst stage (p less than 0.01). A total of 88 nuclear transfer embryos were transferred to recipient gilts for continued development. A single piglet was born after the transfer of a 4-cell nucleus to an enucleated, activated metaphase II oocyte and subsequent in vivo development.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

356 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggest that a heparin-like glycosaminoglycan from the oviduct is a potential in vivo capacitating agent in the bovine.
Abstract: Oviduct fluid collected from chronically cannulated oviducts of heifers was evaluated for its effect on capacitation of bovine sperm in vitro. Capacitation was determined by the ability of sperm to fertilize bovine oocytes in vitro and to undergo an acrosome reaction (AR) upon exposure to lysophosphatidylcholine (LC). After incubation of sperm with 0-25% (v/v) estrual oviduct fluid (collected +/- 1 day from estrus) for 4 h, addition of LC (100 micrograms/ml) for an additional 0.25 h resulted in an increasing percentage of acrosome-reacted sperm as the concentration of oviduct fluid increased. Sperm incubated 4 h with 25% estrual oviduct fluid fertilized more oocytes than sperm incubated in medium alone (p less than 0.05) but was not different from sperm incubated with 10 micrograms/ml heparin (p greater than 0.05). Glucose inhibited the ability of LC to induce ARs in sperm incubated 4 h with heparin or estrual oviduct fluid. Incubation of sperm with 25% oviduct fluid collected at various days over the estrous cycle demonstrated that peak capacitating activity was found at estrus but was also present +/- 1 day from estrus. The active capacitating factor in oviduct fluid was found to be heat stable. In addition, when extraction procedures were applied in sequential order, oviduct fluid capacitating activity was resistant to protease digestion, precipitable by ethanol, size-excluded by Sephadex G-25, and destroyed by nitrous acid. These results suggest that a heparin-like glycosaminoglycan from the oviduct is a potential in vivo capacitating agent in the bovine.

238 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The effect of nuclear transplantation on development was tested in pronuclear embryos in which nuclei were removed and reinserted and the embryos were then transferred to sheep oviducts for 5 d.
Abstract: This study was conducted to develop a method for transplanting nuclei in bovine embryos and to test the development of several stages of donor nuclei transplanted to enucleated pronuclear recipient embryos. Pronuclear embryos were centrifuged to reveal nuclei. Nuclei were removed without penetrating the plasma membrane as membrane-bound karyoplasts, and were inserted into enucleated zygotes by electrically induced cell fusion. The highest rate of fusion (79%) occurred in Zimmerman Cell Fusion medium at 100 V for 20 to 40 microseconds with the fusion membranes oriented parallel to the electrodes. The effect of nuclear transplantation on development was tested in pronuclear embryos in which nuclei were removed and reinserted and the embryos were then transferred to sheep oviducts for 5 d. Of the intact nuclear transplant embryos recovered, 5/29 (17%) developed to morulae or blastocysts compared with 11/30 (37%) of the non-manipulated embryos. Two nuclear transplant embryos were transferred to a recipient cow, and both developed to normal offspring. When nuclei from two-, four-, or eight-cell embryos were transplanted to pronuclear recipient embryos, no development was observed.

159 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The limitations of development observed with relatively differentiated nuclei are thought to result from asynchronies in the length of the cell cycle between the donor cell and the recipient cytoplasm, as well as insufficient genomic modifications.
Abstract: Nuclear transfer has been used to study the differentiation process in embryogenesis, as well as a method to produce multiple identical individuals. When nuclei are transferred to activated, enucleated oocytes the nuclei swell in diameter, synthesize DNA, acquire cytoplasmic proteins and release nuclear proteins. This protein exchange is thought to result in specific genomic modifications resulting in the transferred nucleus behaving as a zygotic nucleus. The limitations of development observed with relatively differentiated nuclei are thought to result from asynchronies in the length of the cell cycle between the donor cell and the recipient cytoplasm, as well as insufficient genomic modifications. This results in incomplete DNA synthesis and incomplete reprogramming before the first cell division. These nuclear modifications are discussed with data from amphibians and mammals.

47 citations


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Journal ArticleDOI
27 Feb 1997-Nature
TL;DR: The birth of lambs from differentiated fetal and adult cells confirms that differentiation of that cell did not involve the irreversible modification of genetic material required for development to term and reinforces previous speculation that by inducing donor cells to become quiescent it will be possible to obtain normal development from a wide variety of differentiated cells.
Abstract: Fertilization of mammalian eggs is followed by successive cell divisions and progressive differentiation, first into the early embryo and subsequently into all of the cell types that make up the adult animal. Transfer of a single nucleus at a specific stage of development, to an enucleated unfertilized egg, provided an opportunity to investigate whether cellular differentiation to that stage involved irreversible genetic modification. The first offspring to develop from a differentiated cell were born after nuclear transfer from an embryo-derived cell line that had been induced to become quiescent. Using the same procedure, we now report the birth of live lambs from three new cell populations established from adult mammary gland, fetus and embryo. The fact that a lamb was derived from an adult cell confirms that differentiation of that cell did not involve the irreversible modification of genetic material required for development to term. The birth of lambs from differentiated fetal and adult cells also reinforces previous speculation that by inducing donor cells to become quiescent it will be possible to obtain normal development from a wide variety of differentiated cells.

4,721 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These studies demonstrate capacitation of bovine sperm by heparin requires at least a 4-h exposure of sperm toHeparin and suggest that plasma membrane changes prior to an AR can be detected by exposure of bovo sperm to LC.
Abstract: Capacitation of bovine sperm was evaluated by determining the ability of sperm to fertilize bovine oocytes in vitro and to undergo an acrosome reaction upon exposure to lysophosphatidylcholine (LC). Incubation of sperm with heparin (10 micrograms/ml) increased the percentage of oocytes fertilized, but this required exposing sperm to heparin for at least 4 h before adding them to oocytes. There was no effect on the percentage of motile or acrosome-reacted sperm after exposure of noncapacitated sperm to 100 micrograms/ml LC for 15 min. When sperm were incubated for 4 h with heparin, exposure to 100 micrograms/ml LC for 15 min had no effect on the percentage of sperm that were motile, but the percentage of acrosome-reacted sperm increased from less than 10% to over 70%. The acrosome reactions (ARs) induced by LC were synchronous, reached maximal levels within 15 min, and differed (p less than 0.001) between sperm incubated under capacitating (with heparin) and noncapacitating conditions (without heparin). The time course required for heparin to capacitate sperm as judged by in vitro fertilization and to render sperm sensitive to LC induction of the AR were found to be similar. The percentage of ARs induced by LC and percentage of oocytes fertilized by sperm were found to be heparin-dose-dependent, with the maximum responses occurring at 5-10 micrograms/ml heparin. The correlation between the mean fertilization and LC-induced AR percentages was 0.997 (p less than 0.01). These studies demonstrate capacitation of bovine sperm by heparin requires at least a 4-h exposure of sperm to heparin and suggest that plasma membrane changes prior to an AR can be detected by exposure of bovine sperm to LC.

1,580 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
07 Sep 2000-Nature
TL;DR: The successful production of cloned piglets from a cultured adult somatic cell population using a new nuclear transfer procedure is reported and the methodology used for embryo reconstruction in each of these species is essentially similar.
Abstract: Since the first report of live mammals produced by nuclear transfer from a cultured differentiated cell population in 1995 (ref. 1), successful development has been obtained in sheep, cattle, mice and goats using a variety of somatic cell types as nuclear donors. The methodology used for embryo reconstruction in each of these species is essentially similar: diploid donor nuclei have been transplanted into enucleated MII oocytes that are activated on, or after transfer. In sheep and goat pre-activated oocytes have also proved successful as cytoplast recipients. The reconstructed embryos are then cultured and selected embryos transferred to surrogate recipients for development to term. In pigs, nuclear transfer has been significantly less successful; a single piglet was reported after transfer of a blastomere nucleus from a four-cell embryo to an enucleated oocyte; however, no live offspring were obtained in studies using somatic cells such as diploid or mitotic fetal fibroblasts as nuclear donors. The development of embryos reconstructed by nuclear transfer is dependent upon a range of factors. Here we investigate some of these factors and report the successful production of cloned piglets from a cultured adult somatic cell population using a new nuclear transfer procedure.

1,275 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Knowledge of the biology of sperm transport can inspire improvements in artificial insemination, IVF, the diagnosis of infertility and the development of contraceptives.
Abstract: At coitus, human sperm are deposited into the anterior vagina, where, to avoid vaginal acid and immune responses, they quickly contact cervical mucus and enter the cervix. Cervical mucus filters out sperm with poor morphology and motility and as such only a minority of ejaculated sperm actually enter the cervix. In the uterus, muscular contractions may enhance passage of sperm through the uterine cavity. A few thousand sperm swim through the uterotubal junctions to reach the Fallopian tubes (uterine tubes, oviducts) where sperm are stored in a reservoir, or at least maintained in a fertile state, by interacting with endosalpingeal (oviductal) epithelium. As the time of ovulation approaches, sperm become capacitated and hyperactivated, which enables them to proceed towards the tubal ampulla. Sperm may be guided to the oocyte by a combination of thermotaxis and chemotaxis. Motility hyperactivation assists sperm in penetrating mucus in the tubes and the cumulus oophorus and zona pellucida of the oocyte, so that they may finally fuse with the oocyte plasma membrane. Knowledge of the biology of sperm transport can inspire improvements in artificial insemination, IVF, the diagnosis of infertility and the development of contraceptives.

941 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: La presente revue considere les donnees recentes concernant les produits impliques dans l'activation du genome de l'embryon chez plusieurs especes.
Abstract: La presente revue considere les donnees recentes concernant les produits impliques dans l'activation du genome de l'embryon chez plusieurs especes

884 citations