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Featured researches published by Shinichi Hochi.


Transgenic Research | 2002

Offspring derived from intracytoplasmic injection of transgenic rat sperm.

Masumi Hirabayashi; Megumi Kato; Toshihiro Aoto; Akiyo Sekimoto; Masatsugu Ueda; Ichiro Miyoshi; Noriyuki Kasai; Shinichi Hochi

The objective of the present study was to produce rat offspring by intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) using a Piezo-driven micromanipulator. Transgenic male rats carrying a green fluorescent protein gene (GFP: homozygous) were used as sperm donors. The epididymal spermatozoa were suspended and sonicated in m-KRB medium and were frozen in the same medium at −20°C until use. When the sperm heads were aspirated into injection pipettes 7–10 μm in diameter and introduced into oocytes from the Wistar strain, no offspring resulted from the transfer of 59 eggs. In contrast, the sperm heads were hung on the tip of injection pipettes 2–4 μm in diameter and introduced into the oocytes, use of Piezo resulting in the production of 18 transgenic offspring carrying the GFP gene from 181 eggs transferred. The oocytes from the Sprague–Dawley strain also supported full-term development following ICSI with three offspring resulting from 163 transferred eggs. In an additional ICSI trial, spermatozoa from infertile transgenic rats carrying human lactalbumin with the thymidine kinase gene (LAC3: heterozygous) were used. The spermatozoa of the LAC3 transgenic rats appeared to be defective and immotile because of the expression of thymidine kinase in the testes, and no ICSI offspring resulted from 218 transferred eggs. These results suggest that ICSI is applicable in rats when Piezo-driven smaller pipettes are used to inject sperm heads together with a limited amount of the surrounding medium and that the ability of isolated sperm heads to participate in normal embryo development is maintained under the cryopreservation conditions employed.


Zygote | 2005

Viable rat offspring derived from oocytes intracytoplasmically injected with freeze-dried sperm heads

Masumi Hirabayashi; Megumi Kato; Junya Ito; Shinichi Hochi

A 2 x 3 factorial designed experiment was conducted in order to examine whether freeze-dried rat spermatozoa can participate in full-term development following intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). A sperm suspension from cauda epididymides of Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats was prepared with or without ultrasonic treatment. The sonicated and non-sonicated sperm suspensions were processed for freeze-thawing (FT groups; 100 microl sample was cooled in liquid nitrogen vapor, stored for 1 day at--196 degrees C, and thawed in a 25 degrees C water bath) and freeze-drying (FD groups; 100 microl sample was frozen in liquid nitrogen for 20 s, lyophilized for 6 h, stored at 4 degrees C for 2 days, and rehydrated with 100 microl ultrapure water), or were subjected to immediate use for ICSI (fresh control groups). The sperm heads were microinjected into denuded SD oocytes using a piezo-driven micropipette 2-4 microm in diameter. The presumptive zygotes were transferred into oviducts of pseudopregnant Wistar female rats. Viable rat offspring were produced from all six experimental groups. Ultrasonic treatment of rat spermatozoa was effective in increasing the offspring rate (23.3% vs 6.7% in fresh control groups, 35.0% vs 7.6% in FT groups, 9.2% vs 2.5% in FD groups). The acrosomal region appeared to be intact even after ultrasonic FT and FD treatments as well as in the fresh controls, while the lateral dorsal region of the sperm membrane was more or less damaged in the sonicated, FT and FD samples. Thus, the successful participation of freeze-dried spermatozoa in full-term development was demonstrated by applying ICSI in the rat.


Theriogenology | 1998

EFFECT OF NUCLEAR STAGES DURING IVM ON THE SURVIVAL OF VITRIFIED-WARMED BOVINE OOCYTES

Shinichi Hochi; Kazumi Ito; Masumi Hirabayashi; Masatsugu Ueda; Ken Kimura; Akira Hanada

The effect of nuclear stages during IVM on the survival of vitrified-warmed bovine oocytes was investigated. Oocytes with compact cumulus cells were cultured for 0, 6, 12 and 24 h in TCM199 supplemented with 5% fetal bovine serum (FBS) in 3% CO2 in air. The oocytes were first exposed to 20% ethylene glycol solution and were subjected to vitrification in a solution containing 40% ethylene glycol, 18% Ficoll-70 and 0.3 M sucrose. After warming in 20 degrees C water, oocytes which had been vitrified at less than 24-h of IVM were again cultured to complete the 24-h of IVM period. Oocytes were then incubated with frozen-thawed spermatozoa in Brackett and Oliphant (BO) medium containing 60 micrograms/ml heparin and 0.25% BSA for 20 h. In vitro fertilization rates of oocytes vitrified-warmed at 0, 6, 12 and 24-h IVM were 75.2, 68.0, 82.0 and 72.4%, respectively, comparable to the rates for unvitrified control oocytes (80.6%). A higher incidence of polyspermic fertilization was observed in oocytes vitrified at 24-h IVM (44.9 vs 22.6% in the control group, P < 0.05). Vitrification of oocytes at 12-h IVM seemed to be better than that of other IVM groups, since the normal fertilization rate of all treated oocytes was the highest (36.0%) among the vitrification groups. Developmental competence of the oocytes following vitrification and in vitro fertilization (12-h IVM group) was examined by cell-free culture of presumptive zygotes up to 9 d in modified synthetic oviduct fluid (mSOF) in 5% CO2, 5% O2 and 90% N2. The cleavage rate of zygotes from vitrified oocytes 48 h after insemination was 29.8%, which was lower than that of the control group (57.0%, P < 0.05). Development to blastocysts from the vitrified oocytes (4.8%) was much lower than that of the control group (27.0%, P < 0.05). These results indicate that cryopreservation of bovine oocytes by vitrification may be affected by their maturation stage in vitro, and that developmental competence to blastocysts of cleaved oocytes following vitrification may be impaired compared with unvitrified control oocytes.


Theriogenology | 1994

Pregnancies following transfer of equine embryos cryopreserved by vitrification

Shinichi Hochi; T. Fujimoto; J. Braun; Norihiko Oguri

The objective of this study was to investigate the in vitro and in vivo developmental abilities of equine embryos cryopreserved by vitrification. Twenty-eight embryos were recovered from Native pony and Thoroughbred mares at Days 5 to 7 by nonsurgical uterine flushing (detection of ovulation=Day 0). The vitrification solution contained 40% ethylene glycol, 18% Ficoll, and 0.3 M sucrose in PBS. The embryos were placed for 1 to 2 min in vitrification solution (Group 1) or following exposure to 20% ethylene glycol in PBS for 10 to 20 min (Groups 2 and 3). Single embryos were loaded in 0.25-ml straws, cooled for 1 min in liquid nitrogen vapor and immersed in liquid nitrogen. Straws were warmed in water (20 degrees C, 20 sec), and the contents were expelled with 0.5 M sucrose in PBS. Then the sucrose was diluted in 1-step (Groups 1 and 2) or 4-steps (Group 3). Embryos (n=21) were cultured for 120 h in TCM199 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum at 37 degrees C in 5% CO2 in air and evaluated morphologically. Development to the hatching or hatched blastocyst stage was obtained in 0 7 , 4 7 and 4 7 embryos in Groups 1, 2 and 3, respectively. An additional 7 embryos were vitrified-warmed according to the treatment of Group 2 (4 embryos) and Group 3 (3 embryos). Five embryos were selected after in vitro culture for 4 h and were transferred nonsurgically into the uterine horn of Day-4 recipient mares. Transfer of 2 embryos (both Day-6 blastocysts: Group-2 treatment) resulted in pregnancies with a viable fetus at Day-60 of the gestation period.


Theriogenology | 2004

Successful vitrification of pronuclear-stage rabbit zygotes by minimum volume cooling procedure

Shinichi Hochi; T Terao; M Kamei; Megumi Kato; Masumi Hirabayashi; Masao Hirao

Rabbit zygotes at the pronuclear-stage were cryopreserved by vitrification using a gel-loading tip (GL-tip), Cryoloop or Cryotop. In GL-tip and Cryoloop methods, zygotes were first exposed to 10% ethylene glycol (EG)+10% DMSO in TCM199+20% fetal bovine serum (FBS) for 2 min, and then equilibrated for 30 s in a vitrification solution composed of 20% EG+20% DMSO+0.6 M sucrose in TCM199+20% FBS. In Cryotop method, zygotes were first exposed to 7.5% EG+7.5% DMSO+20% FBS in TCM199 for 3 min, and then equilibrated for 1 min in a vitrification solution composed of 15% EG+15% DMSO+0.5 M sucrose+20% FBS in TCM199. In vitro culture of vitrified-warmed zygotes using GL-tip and Cryoloop resulted in low cleavage rates (2 and 5%, respectively) and no development into blastocysts. In contrast, zygotes vitrified-warmed using Cryotop exhibited higher proportions of cleavage (58%) and development into blastocysts (24%). When compacted morulae or early blastocysts were vitrified by these three procedures, 80-93% of them exhibited blastocoele expansion or zona hatching during the subsequent 48 h of culture. Use of Cryotop instead of GL-tip or Cryoloop for zygote vitrification, without changing conditions of solutions and periods for exposure, equilibration and post-warm dilution, resulted in cleavage and blastocyst development rates of 88 and 45%, respectively. A longer exposure time (10 min) of zygotes to 7.5% EG+7.5% DMSO+20% FBS in TCM199 resulted in higher proportions of zygotes cleaving (94%) and developing into blastocysts (51%) after Cryotop vitrification. Proportions of post-warm zygotes (10-min exposure group) and fresh control zygotes developing into newborn offspring were 36 and 53%, respectively. Pronuclear-stage rabbit zygotes were successfully cryopreserved by vitrification using the Cryotop method.


Theriogenology | 1993

In vitro maturation of equine oocytes collected by follicle aspiration and by the slicing of ovaries

Y.H. Choi; Shinichi Hochi; J. Braun; Kunitada Sato; Norihiko Oguri

The aim of this study was to examine 2 techniques for oocyte recovery from equine ovaries at slaughter: by aspiration of follicles and by additional slicing of ovaries. The morphology and nuclear configuration of oocytes recovered with either technique, and the time course of nuclear maturation during in vitro maturation were evaluated. Recovery rates were 1.75 and 4.14 oocytes per ovary for aspiration and slicing (total 145 and 344 oocytes from 83 ovaries), respectively. The oocytes were classified according to their cumulus/ooplasm morphology into 4 groups: compact/circular(A), compact/semicircular(B), expanded(C) and others(D). The percentages of oocytes in Groups A, B, C and D were 34, 38, 25 and 3% (aspiration) and 55, 26, 17 and 3% (slicing), respectively. The proportions of oocytes with a germinal vesicle in Groups A, B, C and D were 28 29 (97%), 23 35 (66%), 11 23 (48%) and 2 4 (50%) in oocytes from aspiration and 91 100 (91%), 52 65 (80%), 15 29 (52%) and 1 2 (50%) in oocytes from slicing, respectively. Group A and B oocytes recovered by aspiration (n=212) and slicing (n=312) were cultured in TCM199 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 1 mug/ml estradiol-17beta, and 0.02 AU/ml FSH at 38.5 degrees C in 5% CO(2) in air (5 to 10 oocytes per 50- mu l microdrop). At 8, 16, 24, 32 and 40 h of culture, the oocytes were fixed and stained. There were no significant differences in the percentages of Metaphase II stage (MII)-oocytes between recovery techniques at any time points examined. The proportions of MII-oocytes were 1 42 (2%), 4 43 (9%), 21 42 (50%), 28 45 (62%), and 28 40 (70%) at the respective time point in oocytes from aspiration and 0 51 (0%), 3 54 (6%), 22 59 (37%), 43 72 (60%), and 51 76 (67%) in oocytes from slicing, respectively. In most of the oocytes, resumption of meiosis occurred between 8 and 16 h of culture. The proportions of MII-oocytes increased significantly between 16 and 24 h and between 24 and 32 h of culture.


Theriogenology | 1999

Effect of linoleic acid-albumin in the culture medium on freezing sensitivity of in vitro-produced bovine morulae

Shinichi Hochi; Ken Kimura; Akira Hanada

The objective of this study was to improve the survival of in vitro-produced bovine morulae after cry opreservation. In Experiment 1, presumptive zygotes at 20 h post-insemination (hpi) were cultured in a mixture of modified synthetic oviduct fluid (m-SOF)/0.3% BSA and m-SOF/0.3% linoleic acid-albumin from bovine serum (LAA) at 39.0 degrees C in 5% O2, 5% CO2 and 90% N2 (final LAA concentration: 0, 0.01, 0.03, 0.1 or 0.3%). Morulae harvested at 138 hpi were frozen and thawed in m-PBS/0.3% BSA containing 1.5 M ethylene glycol and were cultured for 96 h in m-SOF/10% FBS to assess further development. The post-thaw survival of morulae derived from culture in 0.1% LAA (60%, P < 0.01) and in 0.03% LAA (55%, P < 0.05) was higher than that in 0% LAA (32%). Lowering the LAA concentration below 0.1% resulted in similar rates of morula development as in m-SOF/0.3% BSA. In Experiment 2, zygotes were cultured in m-SOF/0.1% LAA from 20 to 90 hpi and/or from 90 to 138 hpi. Post-thaw survival of morulae that had been exposed to LAA from 20 to 90 hpi (39%) or from 90 to 138 hpi (56%) was higher than that of morulae cultured without LAA from 20 to 138 hpi (12%, P < 0.02). These survival rates were lower than that of morulae cultured with LAA over a period of 20 to 138 hpi (76%, P < 0.001). The results indicate that cell-free culture of IVM/IVF bovine zygotes in m-SOF supplemented with LAA produces morula-stage embryos relatively tolerant to the process of freezing and thawing.


Theriogenology | 1994

In vitro fertilization rate of horse oocytes with partially removed zonae

Y.H. Choi; Y. Okada; Shinichi Hochi; J. Braun; Kunitada Sato; Norihiko Oguri

Frozen-thawed ejaculated stallion spermatozoa were preincubated for 3 h in BO medium containing 5 mM caffeine and then treated with 0.1 micro M calcium ionophore A23187 for 60 sec. Aliquots of the sperm suspension (final concentration 1-2 x 10(7)/ml) were added to the oocytes which had been matured in vitro for 32 h. In Experiment 1, there were 3 groups of oocytes; cumulus intact, denuded zona-intact, and zona-free. Cumulus cells were removed with 0.5% hyaluronidase and the zona pellucida with 0.1% protease. The oocytes were fixed 20 h after insemination with acetic acid:ethanol (1:3) and stained with 1% orcein. The sperm penetration rate of zona-free oocytes was 83%, whereas the sperm penetration rate was very low (1 to 3%) in the cumulus-enclosed or zona-intact oocytes. In Experiment 2, denuded zona-intact oocytes were placed in PBS supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum 1 h before the end of in vitro maturation. The zona pellucida was micromanipulated with a metal microblade under x 100 magnification within 20 min of treatment with 0.3 M sucrose. For partial zona dissection, a slit in the zona pellucida was made. For partial zona removal, oocytes were transferred to protein-free PBS to fix the oocytes on the bottom of the Petri-dish and to remove a piece of the zona pellucida. Micromanipulated oocytes were subjected to in vitro fertilization as described above. Zona-intact and zona-free oocytes treated with sucrose solution for 20 min were used as controls. The penetration rates were 4 (2/57), 12 (7/58), 52 (31/60), and 86% (44/51) for zona-intact, partially zona dissected, partially zona removed, and zona-free oocytes, respectively. Proportions of oocytes with monospermic penetration were 100 (2/2), 57 (4/7), 58 (18/31), and 34% (15/44), respectively. In Experiment 3, sperm penetration and male pronucleus formation in the partially zona removed oocytes were examined at 2.5 to 20.0 h of insemination. Sperm penetration started 2.5 h post-insemination (22%, 11/49), and increased to 38% (21/55) at 5 h, to 46% (23/50) at 10 h, and to 56% (27/48) at 20 h. The transformation of sperm heads into male pronuclei was first observed 10 h post insemination. These results indicate that assisted fertilization techniques may be a useful tool for achieving fertilization and embryo production in vitro in horses.


Theriogenology | 1996

Effect of cooling and warming rates during cryopreservation on survival of in vitro-produced bovine embryos.

Shinichi Hochi; E. Semple; S.P. Leibo

The effect of cooling and warming rates during cryopreservation on subsequent embryo survival was studied in 607 bovine morulae and 595 blastocysts produced by in vitro maturation, fertilization and culture (IVM/IVF/IVC). Morulae and blastocysts were prepared by co-culturing presumptive zygotes with bovine oviductal epithelial cells (BOEC) in serum-free TCM199 medium for 6 and 7 d, respectively. The embryos in 1.5 M ethylene glycol in plastic straws were seeded at -7 degrees C, cooled to -35 degrees C at each of 5 rates (0.3 degrees, 0.6 degrees , 0.9 degrees, 1.2 degrees, or 1.5 degrees C/min) and then immediately plunged into liquid nitrogen. The frozen embryos were warmed either rapidly in a 35 degrees C water bath (warming rate > 1,000 degrees C/min) or slowly in 25 degrees to 28 degrees C air (< 250 degrees C/mm). With rapid warming, 42.1% of the morulae that had been cooled at 0.3 degrees C/min developed into hatching blastocysts. The proportions of rapidly wanned morulae that hatched decreased with increasing cooling rates (30.4, 19.0, 15.8 and 8.9% at 0.6 degrees , 0.9 degrees, 1.2 degrees and 1.5 degrees C/min, respectively). With slow warming 25.9% of the morulae that had been cooled at 0.3 degrees C/min developed into hatching blastocysts, while <10% of the morulae that had been cooled faster developed. The hatching rate of blastocysts cooled at 0.3 degrees C/min and warmed rapidly (96.3%) was higher than those cooled at 06 degrees and 0.9 degrees C/min (82.7 and 84.6%, respectively), and was also significantly higher than those warmed slowly after cooling at 0.3 degrees, 0.6 degrees or 0.9 degrees C/min (69.1, 56.6 and 51.8%, respectively). Cooling blastocysts at 1.2 degrees or 1.5 degrees C/min resulted in lowered hatching rates either with rapid (71.2 or 66 0%) or slow warming (38.2 or 38.9%). These results indicate that the survival of in vitro-produced bovine morulae and blastocysts is improved by very slow cooling during 2-step freezing, nevertheless, slow warming appears to cause injuries to morulae and blastocysts even after very slow cooling.


Theriogenology | 1994

Preservation of ejaculated and epididymal stallion spermatozoa by cooling and freezing

J. Braun; M. Sakai; Shinichi Hochi; Norihiko Oguri

The suitability of ejaculated and epididymal stallion spermatozoa for cooled storage (5 degrees C) and cryopreservation was examined in 5 ejaculates from each of 6 stallions and in spermatozoa recovered from the cauda epididymidis after castration of these stallions. The percentage of progressively motile spermatozoa, examined by subjective estimation (cooled samples) or by computerized analysis (frozen-thawed samples), was used as parameter. In ejaculated semen samples containing 5 and 25% seminal plasma in a skim milk glucose extender, the lower amount of seminal plasma supported spermatozoal motility significantly better throughout storage at 5 degrees C. Addition of 5 or 25% seminal plasma to perfused epididymal spermatozoa (0% seminal plasma) resulted in a significant stimulation of spermatozoal motility by 25% seminal plasma at 0 h (P<0.05) and to a lesser extent at 24 and 48 h. Post-thaw motility of ejaculated as well as epididymal spermatozoa was not influenced by slow cooling to 15 degrees or 5 degrees C with or without glycerol prior to rapid freezing in liquid nitrogen vapor. During cooled storage, seminal plasma had a stimulatory effect on epididymal spermatozoa and depressed motility in ejaculated spermatozoa. Results on cryopreservation indicate that freezability of equine spermatozoa is already determined when spermatozoa leave the tail of the epididymis.

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Masumi Hirabayashi

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Norihiko Oguri

Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine

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Hiromasa Hara

Jichi Medical University

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J. Braun

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

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