Repro Tech Flashcards

(43 cards)

1
Q

In which anatomical site does artificial insemination most commonly occur in cows?

A

Intra-uterine horn (frozen is most common)

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2
Q

In which anatomical site does artificial insemination most commonly occur in pigs?

A

Transcervical (fresh or cooled is most common)

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3
Q

In which anatomical site does artificial insemination most commonly occur in small ruminants?

A
  • Vaginal (fresh)
  • Cervical (fresh)
  • Uterine (frozen)
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4
Q

In which anatomical site does artificial insemination most commonly occur in dogs?

A

Vaginal (fresh or cooled is most common)

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5
Q

Where are two types of artificial insemination used in horses?

A
  1. Normal AI (intouterine body)
  2. Low dose insemination (deep-horninsemination (close to utero-tubal junction) or hysteroscopic insemination)
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6
Q

Low dose AI technique is not an effective strategy in studs and mares with which conditions?

A

Not effective for sub-fertile/infertile studs or mares with reproductive problems

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7
Q

What is the main risk of AI in horses?

A

PBIE (post-breeding induced endometritis) (inflammatory reaction of the uterus to sperm)

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8
Q

Why is low dose considered a better option than normal AI in a healthy mare?

A

There is less risk of a uterine inflammatory reaction with a low dose insemination

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9
Q

How do you know when to breed a dog?

A

Measure progesterone until levels reach a certain point, then perform AI or have a stud dog come

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10
Q

What is the difference between dogs and all other species regarding their ovulation?

A

Dogs ovulate aprimary oocyte(an immature oocyte that needs to mature during transport in oviduct - this is fine in dogs because their reproductive tract is extremely long)

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11
Q

Should dogs be bred before or after ovulation?

A

Afterbecause we need time for the primary oocyte to mature before we attempt fertilization or it will fail (all other species are bred before ovulation)
Ex. progesterone levels are around 5 ng/mL at time of ovulation but we wait until they are around 17-24 ng/mL before we breed (which can be 3-4 days after ovulation)

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12
Q

What is the difference between the sperm in the epididymis and in the semen?

A

The sperm in the epididymus are not mature

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13
Q

What is an advantage of using sperm from an epidydimal sperm collection?

A

The sperm in the epididymis are immature, so they might handling the cooling or freezing process better

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14
Q

When are two instances you might do an epididymal sperm collection?

A

In a high value animal you are:
- Castrating(may as well use his sperm with it)
- Euthanizing/sudden death(will work up to 24 hours after death)

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15
Q

Describe the process of epidydimal sperm collection (six steps)

A
  1. Collect the epididymis within 24 hours after death or castration
  2. Rinse with cold sterile saline and transport under chilled conditions (to slow metabolism)
  3. Dissect the epididymis
  4. Perform retrograde flush technique (most common technique in horses)
  5. Perform float up technique (used in dogs)
  6. Centrifuge solution to remove debris
  7. Cryopreserve sperm with an appropriate protocol for the respective species
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16
Q

In which two species is epidydimal sperm collection most common in?

A

Dogs and horses (but can occur in any species)

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17
Q

True or False: There is a large variation in how some males freeze over others

A

TRUE

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18
Q

What are the two main cryopreservation procedures used forspermfreezing?

A
  • Dry ice (- 79 °C)
  • Nitrogen vapor (- 100 °C)
19
Q

What is the sex-sorted sperm process?

A
  1. Stain all DNA with a fluorescent dye
  2. X chromosome has a higher amount of DNA (it’s bigger than Y) so it stains a bit brighter
  3. A machine laser detects dye
  4. flourescence is measured and a +ve or negative charge is applied to each drop
  5. sorted based on the amount of DNA it has (sorting options are X, Y, or trash based on positive or negative charge)
  6. Anything it can’t recognize easily is put into trash, so this eliminates any poor quality DNA
  7. This leads to a 90% purity rate (10% chance of wrong sex)
20
Q

What are four advantages of the sex-sorted sperm process in cattle?

A
  • Most sustainableproduction system
  • Decreases calf wastage
  • Gives more opportunities for “beef on dairy” (we want more male beef cattle to cross with dairy cows)
  • Breeds genetically superior animals for replacement (as machine trashes any weird looking DNA)
21
Q

What are four disadvantages of the sex-sorted sperm process in cattle?

A

Remember TIME and TRASH
Time:
- Takes 3 hours to sort one ejaculate
- Delays AI by 6-18 hours (because semen can’t survive until they undergo capacitation)
Trash:
- 75% of sperm are discarded (damages some cells so has shorter capacitation)
- Reduces pregnancy and calving rates by 20%(versus regular semen)

22
Q

What is embryo transfer? What are the two types of embryo transfer?

A

Embryo transfer is the process of collecting embryos from a donor female and transferring them to recipient females for gestation. There are two types, based on how you select the embryos used for transfer:
1. In-vivoderived (IVD)
2. In-vitroproduced (IVP)

23
Q

What are four advantages of using embryo transfer?

A
  • Can be used for preservation and propagation of endangered species
  • Bypasses maternal blocks (anovulation, repeat breeders, or early embryo mortality)
  • Increases the number of offspring from valuable females
  • Allows production of offspring from infertile or even deceased animals
24
Q

What is IVD?

A

A type of embryo transfer in which embryos are collected from a donor female that has beensuper-ovulatedusing FSH (in-vivo derived)
(rescuing follicles that would otherwise die)

25
What are some disadvantages of using IVD?
- Hormone treatments used in IVD (high FSH) can reduce oocyte quality and fertility - Limited by how many follicles ovulate, even with superovulation
26
What is IVP?
A type of embryo transfer in which embryos are collected and matured and fertilized in a laboratory setting (in-vitro produced), then fertilized with IVF technique
27
What are the two most common techniques used for the collection of oocytes for IVP embryo technique?
- Abattoir (aspiration or slicing ovaries of dead donor cows) - In vivo aspiration (aspiration of ovaries from live donor cows)
28
What are some disadvantages to IVP?
- Early embryo manipulation increases embryo mortality and malformations (ex. large offspring syndrome) - Expensive
29
Describe the process of IVD embryo transfer and production (seven)
1. Select a good donor cow: The donor cow should be fertile, have a good body condition score (BCS), and be free from reproductive issues 2. Superovulate:Treat the donor cow with hormones (ex. FSH), to stimulate the development of multiple follicles in the ovaries, resulting in the release of multiple eggs (IVD) 3. Artificial Insemination (AI):Inseminate donor cow with semen from a genetically superior bull 4. Embryo Collection: Sevendays after AI, collect the donor's embryos from the uterus using a non-surgical flushing technique 5. Embryo Classification and Selection: Evaluate collected embryos for quality and stage of development using a standardized grading system 6. Embryo Transfer:Transfer the selected embryos into the uterus of recipient cows that have been synchronized to be at the same stages of estrous cycle as the donor cow.  This embryo-maternal synchronization is crucial for the successful implantation and development of the embryo 7. Pregnancy Confirmation:Confirm pregnancy via ultrasound around 30 days after embryo transfer
30
What is the pregnancy rate of embryo transfer?
30-55% (fresh > frozen) (about the same as AI techniques)
31
Name five factors that embryo transfer in cows is influenced by
- Donor and recipient selection - Sperm quality (motility and morphology) - Superovulatory response - AI timing - Embryo recovery and handling
32
What is considered a poor to fairdonor response for embryo transfer? 
0-5 embryos produced
33
What is considered a good donor response for embryo transfer? 
6-9 embryos transferred
34
What is considered an excellent donor response for embryo transfer? 
10-20 embryos transferred
35
An embryo transfer recipient should be synchronized to be in which days of her cycle at the time of embryo transfer?
Day 6-7 in the cycle (if this is are late it will be an early blastocyst and it won't survive)
36
What are some qualities of the ideal cow donor for embryo transfer?
- Fertile - Good BCS - 2+ parity - Free from reproductive disease
37
True or False: IVF can be used in cattle and horses
False. IVF is species specific to cattle and is not established yet in horses.
38
What are the two main cryopreservation procedures used for embryo and oocyte freezing?
- Slow freezing (controlled-rate freezing allows cells to avoid osmotic shock and intracellular ice formation) - Vitrification (transforms solution into an extremely viscous material before it's cooled super rapidly)
39
Which is a better technique for the cryopreservation of embryos and oocytes and why?
Vitrification (oocytes are extremely sensitive to chilling and embryos have better survival rates with this procedures)
40
What is intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)?
A specialized technique that involves the direct injection of a single sperm into the cytoplasm of an oocyte (egg) to achieve fertilization (used in conjunction with IVF)
41
Why or when might you use ICSI (two)?
- To overcome male related infertility - If oocytes were vitrified (vitrification leads to a hardened zonary pellucida and sperm will find it hard to penetrate it)
42
What is somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT)/cloning?
A process where the nucleus of a fully differentiated somatic cell is transferred into an enucleated oocyte, resulting in an embryo with the same DNA as the donor somatic cell
43
What are three disadvantages to using SCNT?
- High mortality (20-40%) due to early embryonic and placental defects - Causes several issues with fetal development (ex. large offspring syndrome) - Extremely expensive (one egg can cost over $100,000)