Joseph Saragusty
Leibniz Association
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Featured researches published by Joseph Saragusty.
Reproduction | 2011
Joseph Saragusty; Amir Arav
Preservation of female genetics is currently done primarily by means of oocyte and embryo cryopreservation. The field has seen much progress during its four-decade history, progress driven predominantly by research in humans, cows, and mice. Two basic cryopreservation techniques rule the field--controlled-rate freezing, the first to be developed, and vitrification, which, in recent years, has gained a foothold. While much progress has been achieved in human medicine, the cattle industry, and in laboratory animals, this is far from being the case for most other mammals and even less so for other vertebrates. The major strides and obstacles in human and other vertebrate oocyte and embryo cryopreservation will be reviewed here.
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine | 2006
Yaron Bruchim; Eyal Klement; Joseph Saragusty; Efrat Finkeilstein; Philip H. Kass; Itamar Aroch
The medical records of 54 dogs presented to the Hebrew University Veterinary Teaching Hospital and diagnosed with heat stroke were retrospectively reviewed. Data abstracted included history, clinical and clinicopathological signs at admission, treatment, disease progression, and outcome. Exertional and environmental heat stroke were present in 63% (34 of 54) and 37% (20 of 54) of the dogs, respectively, and 78% (42 of 54) were examined between June and August. The mean temperature and heat discomfort index in the particular days of heat stroke were significantly increased (P < .001, P < .001, respectively) compared with their corresponding average daily values. In 27 dogs the body temperature was > or = 41 degrees C (105.8 degrees F). Belgian Malinois (15%, odds ratio [OR] = 24, 95% confidence interval [CI95%] 8.2-64.5), Golden and Labrador Retrievers (21%, OR = 2.08, CI95% 0.95-4.2), and brachycephalic breeds (25%, OR = 1.7, CI95%], 0.81-3.21) were overrepresented, whereas small breeds (<8 kg) were underrepresented (2%, OR = 0.08, CI95%, 0.002-0.48). Thrombocytopenia (45 of 54 dogs) and prolongation of the prothrombin (PT) and activated thromboplastin (aPTT) times (27 of 47 dogs) were recorded during hospitalization. Disseminated intravascular coagulation (P = .013) and acute renal failure (P = .008), diagnosed in 28 of 54 and 18 of 54 of the cases, respectively, were risk factors for death. The overall mortality rate was 50%. Hypoglycemia (<47 mg/dL, P = .003), prolonged PT (>18 seconds, P = .05), and aPTT (>30 sec, P < .001) at admission were associated with death. Serum creatinine >1.5 mg/dL (P = .003) after 24 hours, delayed admission (>90 minutes, P = .032), seizures (P = .02), and obesity (P = .04) were also risk factors for death. Heat stroke in dogs results in serious complications and high fatality rate despite appropriate treatment.
Theriogenology | 2009
Robert Hermes; Frank Göritz; Joseph Saragusty; E. Sós; V. Molnar; Catherine Reid; Franz Schwarzenberger; Thomas B. Hildebrandt
The first successful artificial insemination (AI) in a rhinoceros was reported in 2007 using fresh semen. Following that success, we decided to evaluate the possibility of using frozen-thawed semen for artificial insemination. Semen, collected from a 35-36 year old Southern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum simum) in the UK was frozen using the directional freezing technique. This frozen semen was used in two intrauterine AI attempts on a 30 years old female rhinoceros in Hungary. The first attempt, conducted 30 days postpartum with an insemination dose of approximately 135 x 10(6) motile cells, failed. The second attempt, conducted two estrus cycles later with an insemination dose of approximately 500 x 10(6) motile cells, resulted in pregnancy and the birth of a healthy offspring. This represents the first successful AI using frozen-thawed semen in a rhinoceros, putting it among very few wildlife species in which AI with frozen-thawed semen resulted in a live birth. The incorporation of AI with frozen-thawed semen into the assisted reproduction toolbox opens the way to preserve and transport semen between distant individuals in captivity or between wild and captive populations, without the need to transport stressed or potentially disease carrying animals. In addition, cryopreserved spermatozoa, in combination with AI, are useful methods to extend the reproductive lifespan of individuals beyond their biological lifespan and an important tool for managing genetic diversity in these endangered mammals.
Animal Reproduction Science | 2009
Joseph Saragusty; Thomas B. Hildebrandt; B. Behr; Andreas Knieriem; Jürgen Kruse; Robert Hermes
Reproduction in captive elephants is low and infant mortality is high, collectively leading to possible population extinction. Artificial insemination was developed a decade ago; however, it relies on fresh-chilled semen from just a handful of bulls with inconsistent sperm quality. Artificial insemination with frozen-thawed sperm has never been described, probably, in part, due to low semen quality after cryopreservation. The present study was designed with the aim of finding a reliable semen freezing protocol. Screening tests included freezing semen with varying concentrations of ethylene glycol, propylene glycol, trehalose, dimethyl sulfoxide and glycerol as cryoprotectants and assessing cushioned centrifugation, rapid chilling to suprazero temperatures, freezing extender osmolarity, egg yolk concentration, post-thaw dilution with cryoprotectant-free BC solution and the addition of 10% (v/v) of autologous seminal plasma. The resulting optimal freezing protocol uses cushioned centrifugation, two-step dilution with isothermal 285 m Osm/kg Berliner Cryomedium (BC) with final glycerol concentration of 7% and 16% egg yolk, and freezing in large volume by the directional freezing technique. After thawing, samples are diluted 1:1 with BC solution. Using this protocol, post-thaw evaluations results were: motility upon thawing: 57.2+/-5.4%, motility following 30 min incubation at 37 degrees C: 58.5+/-6.0% and following 3h incubation: 21.7+/-7.6%, intact acrosome: 57.1+/-5.2%, normal morphology: 52.0+/-5.8% and viability: 67.3+/-6.1%. With this protocol, good quality semen can be accumulated for future use in artificial inseminations when and where needed.
Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2009
Joseph Saragusty; Haim Gacitua; I. Rozenboim; Amir Arav
To achieve the ultimate goal of both cryosurgery and cryopreservation, a thorough understanding of the processes responsible for cell and tissue damage is desired. The general belief is that cells are damaged primarily due to osmotic effects at slow cooling rates and intracellular ice formation at high cooling rates, together termed the “two factor theory.” The present study deals with a third, largely ignored component—mechanical damage. Using pooled bull sperm cells as a model and directional freezing in large volumes, samples were frozen in the presence or absence of glass balls of three different diameters: 70–110, 250–500, and 1,000–1,250 µm, as a means of altering the surface area with which the cells come in contact. Post‐thaw evaluation included motility at 0 h and after 3 h at 37°C, viability, acrosome integrity, and hypoosmotic swelling test. Interactions among glass balls, sperm cells, and ice crystals were observed by directional freezing cryomicroscopy. Intra‐container pressure in relation to volume was also evaluated. The series of studies presented here indicate that the higher the surface area with which the cells come in contact, the greater the damage, possibly because the cells are squeezed between the ice crystals and the surface. We further demonstrate that with a decrease in volume, and thus increase in surface area‐to‐volume ratio, the intra‐container pressure during freezing increases. It is suggested that large volume freezing, given that heat dissipation is solved, will inflict less cryodamage to the cells than the current practice of small volume freezing. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2009; 104: 719–728
Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2009
Yaron Bruchim; E. Loeb; Joseph Saragusty; Itamar Aroch
Eleven dogs with fatal heatstroke were examined grossly and histopathologically post mortem. All showed multi-organ haemorrhagic diathesis with coagulative necrosis. Hypaeremia and diffuse oedema were observed in the skin (eight dogs), lungs (11), brain (11) and bone marrow (one). Congestion of the splenic pulp (10 dogs) and hepatic sinusoids (nine) was also noted. Necrosis was observed in the mucosa of the small intestine (seven dogs), large intestine (eight), renal tubular epithelium (nine), hepatic parenchyma (eight) and brain neural tissue (four). The results showed that naturally occurring, fatal canine heatstroke induces acute multiple organ lesions affecting most body systems, and suggest that the more prevalent lesions include haemorrhagic diathesis, microthrombosis and coagulative necrosis. These are probable sequels of hyperthermia-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation and systemic inflammatory response syndrome, which lead to multi-organ dysfunction and death.
Animal Reproduction Science | 2009
Joseph Saragusty; Robert Hermes; Frank Göritz; Dennis L. Schmitt; Thomas B. Hildebrandt
Sex allocation theories predict equal offspring number of both sexes unless differential investment is required or some competition exists. Left undisturbed, elephants reproduce well and in approximately even numbers in the wild. We report an excess of males are born and substantial juvenile mortality occurs, perinatally, in captivity. Studbook data on captive births (CB, n=487) and premature deaths (PD, <5 years of age; n=164) in Asian and African elephants in Europe and North America were compared with data on Myanmar timber (Asian) elephants (CB, n=3070; PD, n=738). Growth in CB was found in three of the captive populations. A significant excess of male births occurred in European Asian elephants (ratio: 0.61, P=0.044) and in births following artificial insemination (0.83, P=0.003), and a numerical inclination in North American African elephants (0.6). While juvenile mortality in European African and Myanmar populations was 21-23%, it was almost double (40-45%) in all other captive populations. In zoo populations, 68-91% of PD were within 1 month of birth with stillbirth and infanticide being major causes. In Myanmar, 62% of juvenile deaths were at >6 months with maternal insufficient milk production, natural hazards and accidents being the main causes. European Asian and Myanmar elephants PD was biased towards males (0.71, P=0.024 and 0.56, P<0.001, respectively). The skewed birth sex ratio and high juvenile mortality hinder efforts to help captive populations become self-sustaining. Efforts should be invested to identify the mechanism behind these trends and seek solutions for them.
Theriogenology | 2009
Joseph Saragusty; Haim Gacitua; I. Rozenboim; Amir Arav
The aim of cryopreservation is to maintain cellular integrity, thereby enabling resumption of proper biological functioning after thawing. Here we propose OptiPrep (60% iodixanol in water) as a protectant during sperm cryopreservation using pooled bull semen as the model. We evaluated OptiPrep concentration effect and its relation to cryopreservation by comparing frozen-thawed and chilled samples. Semen, extended in Andromed with 0 (control), 1.25%, 2.5%, and 5% OptiPrep, was compared after either chilling or freezing in large volume by directional freezing. Sample evaluation included sperm motility upon thawing and after 3h incubation at 37 degrees C for frozen-thawed samples and after 3h and 6h of chilling for chilled samples; viability, acrosomal integrity, and hypoosmotic swelling were also tested for frozen-thawed and chilled samples. Chilled samples with 5% OptiPrep showed inferior viability (P=0.047) and 3h motility (P=0.017) relative to that for chilled samples with 2.5% OptiPrep and inferior viability (P=0.042), acrosomal integrity (P=0.045), and 0h motility (P=0.024) relative to that for chilled samples with 1.25% OptiPrep. The 1.25%, 2.5%, and control samples did not differ. In frozen-thawed samples, 2.5% OptiPrep was superior to all other concentrations for 3h motility (control, P=0.007; 5% OptiPrep, P=0.005; 1.25% OptiPrep, P=0.004) and to 1.25% OptiPrep for acrosomal integrity (P=0.001). In a search for a protection mechanism, we measured glass transition temperature (T(g)) of Andromed and of Andromed with 1.25%, 2.5%, and 5% OptiPrep. Andromed (-58.78 degrees C) and 1.25% OptiPrep (-58.75 degrees C) groups had lower mean T(g) than that of the 2.5% (-57.67 degrees C) and the 5% (-57.10 degrees C) groups. Directional cryomicroscopy revealed that the presence of iodixanol alters ice crystal formation into an intricate net of dendrites. Thus, iodixanol appears to possess cryoprotective properties by helping spermatozoa maintain motility and membrane integrity, possibly through altering ice crystals formation into a more hospitable environment and increasing the glass transition temperature.
Theriogenology | 2008
Robert Hermes; Joseph Saragusty; W. Schaftenaar; Frank Göritz; Dennis L. Schmitt; Thomas B. Hildebrandt
Obstetrics, one of the oldest fields in veterinary medicine, is well described and practiced in domestic and exotic animals. However, when providing care during elephant birth or dystocia, veterinary intervention options differ greatly from any domestic species, and are far more limited due to the dimensions and specific anatomy of the elephant reproductive tract. In addition, aging of captive elephant populations and advanced age of primiparous females make active birth management increasingly important. Intrauterine infection, uterine inertia and urogenital tract pathologies are emerging as major causes for dystocia, often leading to foetal and dam death. This paper reviews the current knowledge on elephant birth and the factors associated with dystocia. It then summarises recommendations for birth and dystocia management. As Caesarean section, the most common ultima ratio in domestic animal obstetrics, is lethal and therefore not an option in the elephant, non-invasive medical treatment, induction of the Fergusson reflex or the conscious decision to leave a retained foetus until it is expelled voluntarily, are key elements in elephant obstetrics. Surgical strategies such as episiotomy and foetotomy are sometimes inevitable in order to try to save the life of the dam, however, these interventions result in chronic post-surgical complications or even fatal outcome. Limited reliable data on serum calcium concentrations, and pharmacokinetics and effect of exogenous oestrogen, oxytocin, and prostaglandins during birth provide the scope of future research, necessary to advance scientific knowledge on obstetrics in elephants.
Theriogenology | 2009
Robert Hermes; Frank Göritz; T.J. Portas; B.R. Bryant; Jennifer M. Kelly; L.J. Maclellan; T. Keeley; Franz Schwarzenberger; Chris Walzer; A. Schnorrenberg; R.E. Spindler; Joseph Saragusty; S. Kaandorp; Thomas B. Hildebrandt
Numerous reports on reproductive pathology in all rhinoceros species illustrate the abundance of female infertility in captive populations. In infertile rhinoceroses, oocyte collection and embryo production could represent the best remaining option for these animals to reproduce and to contribute to the genetic pool. We report here on superstimulation, repeated oocyte recovery, and attempted in vitro fertilization (IVF) in white and black rhinoceroses. Four anestrous rhinoceroses (two white, two black) with unknown follicular status were treated with gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogue, deslorelin acetate, for 6 to 7 d. Number and size of follicles in superstimulated females was significantly higher and larger compared with those in nonstimulated anestrous females (n=9). Ovum pick-up was achieved by transrectal ultrasound-guided follicle aspiration. Up to 15 follicles were aspirated per ovary. During six ovum pick-ups, a total of 29 cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) were harvested with a range of 2 to 9 COCs per collection. No postsurgical complications were noted on the rhinoceros ovaries using this minimally invasive approach. Various in vitro maturation (IVM) and IVF protocols were tested on the collected COCs. Despite the low total number of COCs available for IVM and IVF in this study, we can report the first rhinoceros embryo ever produced in vitro. The production of a 4-cell embryo demonstrated the potential of transrectal ultrasound-guided oocyte recovery as a valuable tool for in vitro production of rhinoceros embryos from otherwise infertile females.