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Dive into the research topics where E.L. Squires is active.

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Featured researches published by E.L. Squires.


Theriogenology | 2003

Embryo technologies in the horse.

E.L. Squires; E.M. Carnevale; Patrick M. McCue; Jason E. Bruemmer

Recent studies demonstrated that zwitterionic buffers could be used for satisfactory storage of equine embryos at 5 degrees C. The success of freezing embryos is dependent upon size and stage of development. Morulae and blastocysts <300 microm can be slowly cooled or vitrified with acceptable pregnancy rates after transfer. The majority of equine embryos are collected from single ovulating mares, as there is no commercially available product for superovulation in equine. However, pituitary extract, rich in FSH, can be used to increase embryo recovery three- to four-fold. Similar to human medicine, assisted reproductive techniques have been developed for the older, subfertile mare. Transfer of in vivo-matured oocytes from young, healthy mares into a recipients oviduct results in a 70-80% pregnancy rate compared with a 30-40% pregnancy rate when the oocytes are from older, subfertile mares. This procedure can also be used to evaluate in vitro maturation systems. In vitro production of embryos is still quite difficult in the horse. However, intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) has been used to produce several foals. Cleavage rates of 60% and blastocyst rates of 30% have been reported after ICSI of in vitro-matured oocytes. Gamete intrafallopian tube transfer (GIFT) is a possible treatment for subfertile stallions. Transfer of in vivo-matured oocytes with 200,000 sperm into the oviduct of normal mares resulted in a pregnancy rate of 55-82%. Oocyte freezing is a technique that has proven difficult in most species. However, equine oocytes vitrified in a solution of ethylene glycol, DMSO, and Ficoll and loaded onto a cryoloop resulted in three pregnancies of 26 transfers and two live foals produced. Production of a cloned horse appears to be likely, as several cloned pregnancies have recently been produced.


Theriogenology | 2000

Insemination of mares with low numbers of either unsexed or sexed spermatozoa.

B.R. Buchanan; G.E. Seidel; Patrick M. McCue; J.L. Schenk; L.A. Herickhoff; E.L. Squires

Two experiments were conducted to determine pregnancy rates in mares inseminated 1) with 5, 25 and 500 x 10(6) progressively motile spermatozoa (pms), or 2) with 25 x 10(6) sex-sorted cells. In Experiment 1, mares were assigned to 1 of 3 treatments: Group 1 (n=20) was inseminated into the uterine body with 500 x 10(6) pms. Group 2 (n=21) and Group 3 (n=20) were inseminated into the tip of the uterine horn ipsilateral to the preovulatory follicle with 25 and 5 x 10(6) pms, respectively. Mares in all 3 groups were inseminated either 40 (n=32) or 34 h (n=29) after GnRH administration. More mares became pregnant when inseminated with 500 x 10(6) (18/20 = 90%) than with 25 x 10(6) pms (12/21 = 57%; P<0.05), but pregnancy rates were similar for mares inseminated with 25 x 10(6) vs 5 x 10(6) pms (7/20 = 35%) (P>0.1). In Experiment 2, mares were assigned to 1 of 2 treatments: Group A (n=11) was inseminated with 25 x 10(6) spermatozoa sorted into X and Y chromosome-bearing populations in a skimmilk extender. Group B (n=10) mares were inseminated similarly except that spermatozoa were sorted into the skimmilk extender + 4% egg yolk. Inseminations were performed 34 h after GnRH administration. Freshly collected semen was incubated in 224 microM Hoechst 33342 at 400 x 10(6) sperm/mL in HBGM-3 for 1 hr at 35 degrees C and then diluted to 100 x 10(6) sperm/mL for sorting. Sperm were sorted by sex using flow cytometer/cell sorters. Spermatozoa were collected at approximately 900 cells/sec into either the extender alone (Group A) or extender + 4% egg yolk (Group B), centrifuged and suspended to 25 x 10 sperm/mL and immediately inseminated. Pregnancy rates were similar (P>0.1) between the sperm treatments (extender alone = 13/10, 30% vs 4% EY + extender = 5/10, 50%). Based on ultrasonography, fetal sex at 60 to 70 d correlated perfectly with the sex of the sperm inseminated, demonstrating that foals of predetermined sex can be obtained following nonsurgical insemination with sexed spermatozoa.


Theriogenology | 1999

The current status of equine embryo transfer

E.L. Squires; Patrick M. McCue; D.K. Vanderwall

The use of embryo transfer in the horse has increased steadily over the past two decades. However, several unique biological features as well as technical problems have limited its widespread use in the horse as compared with that in the cattle industry. Factors that affect embryo recovery include the day of recovery, number of ovulations, age of the donor and the quality of sires semen. Generally, embryo recoveries are performed 7 or 8 d after ovulation unless the embryos are to be frozen, in which case recovery is performed 6 d after ovulation. Most embryos are recovered from single-ovulating mares. Because there is no commercially available hormonal preparation for inducing multiple ovulation in the horse, equine pituitary extract has been used to increase the number of ovulations in treated mares, but FSH of ovine or porcine origin is relatively ineffective in inducing multiple ovulation in the mare. Factors shown to affect pregnancy rates after embryo transfer include method of transfer, synchrony of the donor and recipient, embryo quality, and management of the recipient. One of the major improvements in equine embryo transfer over the last several years is the ability to store embryos at 5 degrees C and thus ship them to a centralized station for transfer into recipient mares. Embryos are collected by practitioners on the farm, cooled to 5 degrees C in a passive cooling unit and shipped to an embryo transfer station without a major decrease in fertility. However, progress in developing techniques for freezing equine embryos has been slow. Currently, only small, Day-6 equine embryos can be frozen with reasonable success. Additional studies are needed to refine the techniques for freezing embryos collected from mares 7 or 8 d after ovulation. Demand for the development of assisted reproductive techniques in the horse has increased dramatically. Collection of equine oocytes by transvaginal, ultrasound-guided puncture and the transfer of these oocytes into recipients is now being used to produce pregnancies from donors that had previously been unable to provide embryos. In vitro fertilization, however, has been essentially unsuccessful in the horse. One alternative to in vitro fertilization that has shown promise is intracytoplasmic sperm injection. However, culture conditions for in vitro-produced embryos appear to be inadequate. The continued demand for assisted reproductive technology will likely result in the further development of techniques that are suitable for use in the horse.


Theriogenology | 1992

Determination of temperature and cooling rate which induce cold shock in stallion spermatozoa.

D.M. Moran; D.J. Jasko; E.L. Squires; Rupert P. Amann

Experiments were conducted to determine temperatures between 24 and 4 degrees C at which stallion spermatozoa are most susceptible to cold shock damage. Semen was diluted to 25x10(6) spermatozoa/ml in a milk-based extender. Aliquots of extended semen were then cooled in programmable semen coolers. Semen was evaluated by computerized semen analysis initially and after 6, 12, 24, 36 and 48 hours of cooling. In Experiment 1A, semen was cooled rapidly (-0.7 degrees C/minute) from 24 degrees C to either 22, 20, 18 or 16 degrees C; then it was cooled slowly (-0.05 degrees C/minute) to a storage temperature of 4 degrees C. In Experiment 1B, rapid cooling proceeded from 24 degrees C to either 22, 19, 16, or 13 degrees C, and then slow cooling occurred to 4 degrees C. Initiating slow cooling at 22 or 20 degrees C resulted in higher (P<0.05) total and progressive motility over the first 24 hours of cooling than initiating slow cooling at 16 degrees C. Initiation of slow cooling at 22 or 19 degrees C resulted in higher (P<0.05) total and progressive motility over 48 hours of cooled storage than initiation of slow cooling at 16 or 13 degrees C. In Experiment 2A, semen was cooled rapidly from 24 to 19 degrees C, and then cooled slowly to either 13, 10, 7 or 4 degrees C, at which point rapid cooling was resumed to 4 degrees C. Resuming the fast rate of cooling at 7 degrees C resulted in higher (P<0.05) total and progressive motility at 36 and 48 hours of cooled storage than resuming fast cooling at 10 or 13 degrees C. In Experiment 2B, slow cooling proceeded to either 10, 8, 6 or 4 degrees C before fast cooling resumed to 4 degrees C. There was no significant difference (P>0.05) at most storage times in total or progressive motility for spermatozoa when fast cooling was resumed at 8, 6 or 4 degrees C. In Experiment 3, cooling units were programmed to cool rapidly from 24 to 19 degrees C, then cool slowly from 19 to 8 degrees C, and then resume rapid cooling to storage temperatures of either 6, 4, 2 or 0 degrees C. Storage at 6 or 4 degrees C resulted in higher (P<0.05) total and progressive motility over 48 hours of storage than 0 or 2 degrees C.


Theriogenology | 1991

Effect of seminal plasma dilution or removal on spermatozoal motion characteristics of cooled stallion semen

D.J. Jasko; D.M. Moran; M.E. Farlin; E.L. Squires

Abstract Centrifugation of stallion semen to remove seminal plasma was hypothesized to be potentially beneficial in maintaining spermatozoal motility during cooled storage of extended semen. This hypothesis was tested using a series of experiments that evaluated spermatozoal motion characteristics, as determined by computerized semen analysis, of extended, cooled stallion semen. In the first experiment, aliquots of semen were extended to 50 × 10 6 sperm/ml with a nonfat, dried skim milk solids-glucose semen extender and subsequently were cooled slowly to 5°C and stored for 24 hours. Those aliquots utilizing high dilution ratios of extender (>1:2.1, volume of semen: volume of extender) maintained higher spermatozoal motility and mean velocity than aliquots using a lower dilution ratio. In the second experiment, semen was extended to 50 × 10 6 sperm/ml and centrifuged at 500 × g for 18 minutes. The sperm pellet was resuspended without the removal of extended seminal plasma. An immediate and significant (P 6 sperm/ml and centrifuged at 500 × g for 18 minutes, with the subsequent removal of extended seminal plasma and resuspension of the sperm pellet in fresh extender. A significant (P 6 sperm/ml.


Equine Veterinary Journal | 2010

Hysteroscopic insemination of low numbers of flow sorted fresh and frozen/thawed stallion spermatozoa.

A. C. Lindsey; J. L. Schenk; J.K. Graham; J. E. Bruemmer; E.L. Squires

The objective of this experiment was to determine the effects of flow cytometric sorting and freezing on stallion sperm fertility. A 2 x 2 factorial design was used to delineate effects of flow sorting and freezing spermatozoa. Oestrus was synchronised (July-August) in 41 mares by administering 10 ml altrenogest (2.2 mg/ml) per os for 10 consecutive days, followed by 250 microg cloprostenol i.m. on Day 11. Ovulation was induced by administering 3,000 iu hCG i.v. either 6 h (fresh spermatozoa) or 30 h (frozen/thawed spermatozoa) prior to insemination. Mares were assigned randomly to one of 4 sperm treatment groups. Semen was collected from 2 stallions with an artificial vagina and processed for each treatment. Treatment 1 (n = 10 mare cycles) consisted of fresh, nonsorted spermatozoa and Treatment 2 (n = 16 mare cycles) of fresh, flow sorted spermatozoa. Spermatozoa to be sorted were stained with Hoechst 33342 and sorted into X- and Y-chromosome-bearing populations based on DNA content using an SX MoFlo sperm sorter. Treatment 3 (n = 16 mare cycles) consisted of frozen/thawed nonsorted spermatozoa (frozen at 33.5 x 106 sperm/ml in 0.25 ml straws) and Treatment 4 (n = 15 mare cycles) of flow sorted frozen/thawed spermatozoa (frozen at 64.4 x 10(6) sperm/ml). Concentrations of sperm in both cryopreserved treatments were adjusted, based on predetermined average post-thaw motilities, so that each insemination contained approximately 5 x 10(6) motile spermatozoa. Hysteroscopic insemination of 5 x 10(6) motile spermatozoa in a volume of 230 microd was used for all treatments. Pregnancy was determined ultrasonographically 16 days postovulation. No differences were found (P>0.1) in the pregnancy rates for mares inseminated with fresh nonsorted (4/10 = 40.0%), fresh flow sorted (6/16 = 37.5%), frozen/thawed nonsorted (6/16 = 37.5%) and flow sorted frozen/thawed spermatozoa (2/15 = 133%). Pregnancy rates tended (P = 0.12) to be lower following insemination of frozen/thawed flow sorted spermatozoa. Further studies are needed with a larger number of mares to determine if fertility of flow sorted frozen/thawed spermatozoa can be improved.


Theriogenology | 1992

Effect of seminal plasma and egg yolk on motion characteristics of cooled stallion spermatozoa

D.J. Jasko; J.A. Hathaway; V.L. Schaltenbrand; W.D. Simper; E.L. Squires

Abstract This study on extended, cooled spermatozoa was designed to determine 1) the concentration of seminal plasma required for the preservation of sperm motility, 2) whether the addition of egg yolk to a milk based semen extender improved the maintenance of sperm motility, and 3) whether there was a beneficial interaction of seminal plasma and egg yolk in the maintenance of sperm motility. For all experiments, semen was centrifuged for the removal or reduction of seminal plasma and spermatozoa were resuspended in a nonfat, dried skim milk - glucose extender. In Experiment 1, removal of all seminal plasma from spermatozoa and suspension in the extender resulted in a significant (P


Theriogenology | 2002

Pregnancies from vitrified equine oocytes collected from super-stimulated and non-stimulated mares

L.J. Maclellan; E.M. Carnevale; M.A. Coutinho da Silva; C.F. Scoggin; Jason E. Bruemmer; E.L. Squires

The objectives were to compare embryo development rates after transfer into inseminated recipients, vitrified thawed oocytes collected from super-stimulated versus non-stimulated mares. In vivo matured oocytes were collected by transvaginal, ultrasound guided follicular aspiration from super-stimulated and non-stimulated mares 24-26 h after administration of hCG. Oocytes were cultured for 2-4 h prior to vitrification. Cryoprotectants were loaded in three steps before oocytes were placed onto a 0.5-0.7 mm diameter nylon cryoloop and plunged directly into liquid nitrogen. Oocytes were thawed and the cryoprotectant was removed in three steps. After thawing, oocytes were cultured 10-12 h before transfer into inseminated recipients. Non-vitrified oocytes, cultured 14-16 h before transfer, were used as controls. More oocytes were collected from 23 non-stimulated mares (20 of 29 follicles), than 10 super-stimulated mares (18 of 88 follicles; P < 0.001). Of the 20 oocytes collected from non-stimulated mares, 12 were vitrified and 8 were transferred as controls. After thawing, 10 of the 12 oocytes were morphologically intact and transferred into recipients resulting in one embryonic vesicle on Day 16 (1 of 12 = 8%). Fourteen oocytes from super-stimulated mares were vitrified, and 4 were transferred as controls. After thawing, 9 of the 14 oocytes were morphologically intact and transferred into recipients resulting in two embryonic vesicles on Day 16 (2 of 14 = 14%). In control transfers, 7 of 8 oocytes from non-stimulated mares and 3 of 4 oocytes from super-stimulated mares resulted in embryonic vesicles on Day 16. The two pregnancies from vitrified oocytes resulted in healthy foals.


Theriogenology | 2000

Vitrification of immature and mature equine and bovine oocytes in an ethylene glycol, ficoll and sucrose solution using open-pulled straws

A.E. Hurtt; F. Landim-Alvarenga; G.E. Scidel; E.L. Squires

Studies were conducted to compare viability of immature and mature equine and bovine oocytes vitrified in ethylene glycol. Ficoll using open-pulled straws. Oocytes from slaughterhouse ovaries (N=50/group) with >2 layers of compact cumulus cells were vitrified immediately after collection (immature groups) or vitrified after 36 to 40 (equine) or 22 to 24 (bovine) h of maturation (mature groups). Immature oocytes were matured after thawing. Before vitrification, oocytes were exposed to TCM-199 + 10 FCS + 2.5 M ethylene glycol + 18% Ficoll + 0.5 M sucrose (EFS) for 30 sec and then to 5 M ethylene glycol in EFS for 25 to 30 sec at 37 degrees C. Oocytes were loaded into straws in approximately 2 microL of cryoprotectant and plunged directly into LN2. Warming straws and dilution of cryoprotectant was at 37 degrees C in TCM-199 + 10% FCS + 0.25 M sucrose for 1 min and then TCM-199 + 10% FCS + 0.15 M sucrose for 5 min. Non-vitrified oocytes undergoing the same maturation protocol for both species were used as controls. Oocytes were stained with orcein for nuclear maturation and live/dead status was determined using Hoechst 33342. Maturation of oocytes to MII after thawing was similar (P>0.05) among groups within species. All equine treatment groups had lower (P<0.01) maturation rates than bovine groups. Live/dead status did not differ among vitrification treatments within species. The percentage of oocytes that survived and reached MII did not differ (P>0.05) within treatment groups of each species. Rates of mature cortical granule distribution did not differ (P>0.05) within species; however, more bovine oocytes (P<0.05) had mature cortical granule distribution and nuclear maturation than equine oocytes. When concurrent cortical granule distribution and nuclear maturation were examined, there was no difference within species; however, only 30% of equine oocytes had nuclear and cytoplasmic maturation compared with 70% of bovine oocytes (P<0.05). In summary, both immature and mature equine and bovine oocytes survived cryopreservation using vitrification in open-pulled straws. However, survival rates were lower for equine than for bovine oocytes.


Theriogenology | 1985

A new procedure for the cryopreservation of equine embryos.

N.P. Slade; T. Takeda; E.L. Squires; R.P. Elsden; G.E. Seidel

Early equine blastocysts and blastocysts were collected nonsurgically at six days post-ovulation. Thirty-two embryos were randomly assigned to a 2x2 factorial design. Factors were: 1) 0.5-ml straws or 1-ml glass ampules; and 2) plunging into liquid nitrogen (IN(2)) at -33 C or -38 C. Cryoprotectant, 10% glycerol in PBS plus 5% fetal calf serum (FCS) was added in two steps, 5% then 10%. Embryos were cooled at 4 C/min to -6 C and then seeded, 0.3 C/min to -30 or -35 C and 0.1 C/min to -33 or -38 C. Samples were thawed in 37 C water and glycerol removed in six steps, 10 min per step. Embryo quality and stage of development were evaluated prior to freezing, immediately post-thaw and after 24 h culture in Hams F10 with 5% FCS. The mean post-thaw quality of embryos plunged at -33 C was superior (P<0.05) to that of embryos plunged at -38 C (2.0 vs 2.9). Embryos frozen in ampules and plunged at -38 C were of poorer quality (P<0.05) than those frozen in ampules and plunged at -33 C or frozen in straws and plunged at -33 C. After 24 h of culture, more embryos developed if frozen in straws compared to ampules, and plunging at -33 C resulted in higher quality embryos than plunging at -38 C. In Experiment 2, 23 embryos were packaged in straws and plunged at -33 C as described in Experiment 1. Six of the 23 surgically transferred frozen embryos were degenerate at thawing and the remaining 17 surgically transferred were via flank incision. Pregnancy rate at 50 days post-ovulation was 53% (nine of 17). Early blastocysts resulted in a higher (P<0.05) pregnancy rate (8 10 , 80%) than expanded blastocysts (1 7 , 14%).

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G.E. Seidel

Colorado State University

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E.M. Carnevale

Colorado State University

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B.W. Pickett

Colorado State University

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J.K. Graham

Colorado State University

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A. O. McKinnon

Colorado State University

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D.J. Jasko

Colorado State University

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