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Dive into the research topics where Terrence R. Tiersch is active.

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Featured researches published by Terrence R. Tiersch.


Theriogenology | 2000

Flow cytometric evaluation of antibiotic effects on viability and mitochondrial function of refrigerated spermatozoa of Nile tilapia.

M. Segovia; Jill A. Jenkins; C. Paniagua-Chavez; Terrence R. Tiersch

Improved techniques for storage and evaluation of fish sperm would enhance breeding programs around the world. The goal of this study was to test the effect of antibiotics on refrigerated sperm from Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) by use of flow cytometry with 2 dual-staining protocols for objective assessment of sperm quality. Concentrations of 1 x 10(9). sperm/mL were suspended in Ringers buffer at 318 mOsmol/kg (pH 8.0). The fluorescent stains Sybr 14 (10 microM), propidium iodide (2.4 mM), and rhodamine 123 (0.13 microM) were used to assess cell viability and mitochondrial function. Three concentrations of ampicillin, gentamicin, and an antibiotic/antimycotic solution were added to fresh spermatozoa. Motility estimates and flow cytometry measurements were made daily during 7 d of refrigerated storage (4 degrees C). The highest concentrations of gentamicin and antibiotic/antimycotic and all 3 concentrations of ampicillin significantly reduced sperm viability. The highest of each of the 3 antibiotic concentrations significantly reduced mitochondrial function. This study demonstrates that objective sperm quality assessments can be made using flow cytometry and that addition of antibiotics at appropriate concentrations can lengthen refrigerated storage time for tilapia spermatozoa. With minor modifications, these protocols can be adapted for use with sperm from other species and with other tissue types.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology C-toxicology & Pharmacology | 2009

Current status of sperm cryopreservation in biomedical research fish models: zebrafish, medaka, and Xiphophorus.

Huiping Yang; Terrence R. Tiersch

Aquarium fishes are becoming increasingly important because of their value in biomedical research and the ornamental fish trade, and because many have become threatened or endangered in the wild. This review summarizes the current status of sperm cryopreservation in three fishes widely used in biomedical research: zebrafish, medaka, and live-bearing fishes of the genus Xiphophorus, and will focus on the needs and opportunities for future research and application of cryopreservation in aquarium fish. First, we summarize the basic biological characteristics regarding natural habitat, testis structure, spermatogenesis, sperm morphology, and sperm physiology. Second, we compare protocol development of sperm cryopreservation. Third, we emphasize the importance of artificial fertilization in sperm cryopreservation to evaluate the viability of thawed sperm. We conclude with a look to future research directions for sperm cryopreservation and the application of this technique in aquarium species.


Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries | 2002

Differential genome duplication and fish diversity

Rongjia Zhou; Hanhua Cheng; Terrence R. Tiersch

The duplication of genes and entire genomes arebelieved to be important mechanisms underlyingmorphological variation and functionalinnovation in the evolution of life andespecially for the broad diversity observed inthe speciation of fishes. How did these fishspecies and their genetic diversity arise? Theoccurrence of three rounds of genomeduplication during vertebrate evolution mightexplain why many gene families are typicallyabout half the size in land vertebrates as theyare in fishes. However, mechanisms of geneticdiversity in fish lineages need to be furtherexplained. Here we propose that differentialgenome duplication of from two to six roundsoccurred in different fish lines, offering newopportunities during the radiation of fishlineages. This model provides a fundamentalbasis for the understanding of theirspeciation, diversity and evolution.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 1998

Cryopreservation of Sperm of the Endangered Razorback Sucker

Terrence R. Tiersch; Chester R. Figiel; J. Holt Williamson; Gary J. Carmichael; Owen T. Gorman

Abstract The endangered razorback sucker Xyrauchen texanus is endemic to the Colorado River system in western North America and is threatened with extinction because of limited recruitment. To assist in management and recovery efforts, we developed methods for the cryopreservation of sperm, evaluated the influence of various factors on motility of thawed sperm, and examined the effect on fertilization of cooling rate and the addition of caffeine. Sperm samples cryopreserved with 10% methanol (MeOH) had significantly higher postthaw motility than did samples preserved with 5% or 20% MeOH or with 5% or 10% dimethyl sulfoxide, N, N-dimethylacetamide, glycerol, propylene glycol, or ethylene glycol. Sperm samples cryopreserved in 0.5-mL and 2.5-mL straws had significantly higher postthaw motility than did samples cryopreserved in 0.25-mL straws. Exposure to 10% MeOH for up to 30 min did not significantly influence sperm motility before freezing or after thawing. Cooling rate (−21°C/min or −91°C/min) did not si...


Cryobiology | 2011

High-throughput cryopreservation of spermatozoa of blue catfish (Ictalurus furcatus): Establishment of an approach for commercial-scale processing

E Hu; Huiping Yang; Terrence R. Tiersch

Hybrid catfish created by crossing of female channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) and male blue catfish (Ictalurus furcatus) are being used increasingly in foodfish aquaculture because of their fast growth and efficient food conversion. However, the availability of blue catfish males is limited, and their peak spawning is at a different time than that of the channel catfish. As such, cryopreservation of sperm of blue catfish could improve production of hybrid catfish, and has been studied in the laboratory and tested for feasibility in a commercial dairy bull cryopreservation facility. However, an approach for commercially relevant production of cryopreserved blue catfish sperm is still needed. The goal of this study was to develop practical approaches for commercial-scale sperm cryopreservation of blue catfish by use of an automated high-throughput system (MAPI, CryoBioSystem Co.). The objectives were to: (1) refine cooling rate and cryoprotectant concentration, and evaluate their interactions; (2) evaluate the effect of sperm concentration on cryopreservation; (3) refine cryoprotectant concentration based on the highest effective sperm concentration; (4) compare the effect of thawing samples at 20 or 40°C; (5) evaluate the fertility of thawed sperm at a research scale by fertilizing with channel catfish eggs; (6) test the post-thaw motility and fertility of sperm from individual males in a commercial setting, and (7) test for correlation of cryopreservation results with biological indices used for male evaluation. The optimal cooling rate was 5°C/min (Micro Digitcool, IMV) for high-throughput cryopreservation using CBS high-biosecurity 0.5-ml straws with 10% methanol, and a concentration of 1×10(9)sperm/ml. There was no difference in post-thaw motility when samples were thawed at 20°C for 40s or 40°C for 20s. After fertilization, the percentage of neurulation (Stage V embryos) was 80±21%, and percentage of embryonic mobility (Stage VI embryo) was 51±22%. There was a significant difference among the neurulation values produced by thawed blue catfish sperm, fresh blue catfish sperm (P=0.010) and channel catfish sperm (P=0.023), but not for Stage VI embryos (P≥0.585). Cryopreserved sperm from ten males did not show significant variation in post-thaw motility or fertility at the neurulation stage. This study demonstrates that the protocol established for high-throughput cryopreservation of blue catfish sperm can provide commercially relevant quantities and quality of sperm with stable fertility for hybrid catfish production and provides a model for establishment of commercial-scale approaches for other aquatic species.


Marine Biotechnology | 2001

Cryopreservation in aquarium fishes.

Terrence R. Tiersch

Abstract: Few studies have addressed sperm cryopreservation in aquarium fishes (body sizes of 10 cm or less). There are several challenges inherent in developing cryopreservation procedures for these fishes. First, their small body size and sperm volume limit experimental replication and the numbers of treatments possible without pooling of samples. This hinders research, especially if many experimental variables are evaluated. The small sample volume necessitates identification of optimal sperm-to-egg ratios to maximize fertilization potential and places greater emphasis on increasing and maintaining sperm viability after thawing. Other technical problems include the use of 0.25-ml French straws, which increase difficulties in sample handling (automated straw fillers are more common for the 0.5-ml straw) and labeling. Sperm cryopreservation of live-bearing fishes (with internal fertilization) is essentially unexplored. The sperm of these fishes is sufficiently different in structure (e.g., head shape) and physiology (e.g., energy metabolism) from the sperm of other fishes that the need to develop specialized techniques is almost assured. The requirement for artificial insemination also introduces a new variable complicating the collection of data (e.g., assessing fertilization is not straightforward with internally held eggs). Cryopreservation in aquarium fishes will assist the development (e.g., through selective breeding), protection (e.g., through germplasm repositories), and distribution (e.g., through shipment of frozen sperm) of research lines and offers benefits for restoration of endangered species.


Biology of Reproduction | 2001

Fertilization of Eggs of Zebrafish, Danio rerio, by Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection

Germán A. Poleo; Richard S. Denniston; Brett C. Reggio; R. A. Godke; Terrence R. Tiersch

Abstract To evaluate the potential for fertilization by sperm injection into fish eggs, sperm from zebrafish, Danio rerio, were microinjected directly into egg cytoplasm of two different zebrafish lines. To evaluate physiological changes of gametes on the possible performance of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), four different combinations of injection conditions were conducted using activated or nonactivated gametes. From a total of 188 zebrafish eggs injected with sperm in all treatments, 31 (16%) developed to blastula, 28 (15%) developed to gastrula, 10 (5%) developed abnormally to larval stages, and another 3 (2%) developed normally and hatched. The highest fertilization rate (blastodisc formation) was achieved by injection of activated spermatozoa into nonactivated eggs (35%). Injections were most effective when performed within the first hour after egg collection. Flow cytometric analysis of the DNA content of the developing ICSI embryos revealed diploidy, and the use of a dominant pigment marker confirmed paternal inheritance. Our study indicates that injection of a single sperm cell into the cytoplasm of zebrafish eggs allows fertilization and subsequent development of normal larvae to hatching and beyond.


Genetics Selection Evolution | 2002

SRY-related genes in the genome of the rice field eel (Monopterus albus).

Rongjia Zhou; Hanhua Cheng; Quiyang Zhang; Yiqing Guo; Richard K. Cooper; Terrence R. Tiersch

The mammalian sex determining gene, SRY, is the founding member of the new growing family of Sox (SRY-like HMG-box gene) genes. Sox genes encode transcription factors with diverse roles in development, and a few of them are involved in sex determination and differentiation. We report here the existence of Sox genes in the rice field eel, Monopterus albus, and DNA sequence information of the HMG box region of five Sox genes. The Sox 1, Sox 4 and Sox 14 genes do not have introns in the HMG box region. The Sox 9 gene and Sox 17 gene, which each have an intron in the conserved region, show strong identity at the amino acid level with the corresponding genes of mammals and chickens. Similar structure and identity of the Sox 9 and Sox 17 genes among mammals, chickens and fish suggest that these genes have evolutionarily conserved roles, potentially including sex determination and differentiation.


BMC Genomics | 2017

Aquaculture genomics, genetics and breeding in the United States: current status, challenges, and priorities for future research

Hisham Abdelrahman; Mohamed ElHady; Acacia Alcivar-Warren; Standish K. Allen; Rafet Al-Tobasei; Lisui Bao; Ben Beck; Harvey D. Blackburn; Brian G. Bosworth; John Buchanan; Jesse A. Chappell; William H. Daniels; Sheng Dong; Rex A. Dunham; Evan Durland; Ahmed Elaswad; Marta Gomez-Chiarri; Kamal Gosh; Ximing Guo; Perry B. Hackett; Terry Hanson; Dennis Hedgecock; Tiffany Howard; Leigh Holland; Molly Jackson; Yulin Jin; Karim Khalil; Thomas Kocher; Tim Leeds; Ning Li

Advancing the production efficiency and profitability of aquaculture is dependent upon the ability to utilize a diverse array of genetic resources. The ultimate goals of aquaculture genomics, genetics and breeding research are to enhance aquaculture production efficiency, sustainability, product quality, and profitability in support of the commercial sector and for the benefit of consumers. In order to achieve these goals, it is important to understand the genomic structure and organization of aquaculture species, and their genomic and phenomic variations, as well as the genetic basis of traits and their interrelationships. In addition, it is also important to understand the mechanisms of regulation and evolutionary conservation at the levels of genome, transcriptome, proteome, epigenome, and systems biology. With genomic information and information between the genomes and phenomes, technologies for marker/causal mutation-assisted selection, genome selection, and genome editing can be developed for applications in aquaculture. A set of genomic tools and resources must be made available including reference genome sequences and their annotations (including coding and non-coding regulatory elements), genome-wide polymorphic markers, efficient genotyping platforms, high-density and high-resolution linkage maps, and transcriptome resources including non-coding transcripts. Genomic and genetic control of important performance and production traits, such as disease resistance, feed conversion efficiency, growth rate, processing yield, behaviour, reproductive characteristics, and tolerance to environmental stressors like low dissolved oxygen, high or low water temperature and salinity, must be understood. QTL need to be identified, validated across strains, lines and populations, and their mechanisms of control understood. Causal gene(s) need to be identified. Genetic and epigenetic regulation of important aquaculture traits need to be determined, and technologies for marker-assisted selection, causal gene/mutation-assisted selection, genome selection, and genome editing using CRISPR and other technologies must be developed, demonstrated with applicability, and application to aquaculture industries. Major progress has been made in aquaculture genomics for dozens of fish and shellfish species including the development of genetic linkage maps, physical maps, microarrays, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays, transcriptome databases and various stages of genome reference sequences. This paper provides a general review of the current status, challenges and future research needs of aquaculture genomics, genetics, and breeding, with a focus on major aquaculture species in the United States: catfish, rainbow trout, Atlantic salmon, tilapia, striped bass, oysters, and shrimp. While the overall research priorities and the practical goals are similar across various aquaculture species, the current status in each species should dictate the next priority areas within the species. This paper is an output of the USDA Workshop for Aquaculture Genomics, Genetics, and Breeding held in late March 2016 in Auburn, Alabama, with participants from all parts of the United States.Advancing the production efficiency and profitability of aquaculture is dependent upon the ability to utilize a diverse array of genetic resources. The ultimate goals of aquaculture genomics, genetics and breeding research are to enhance aquaculture production efficiency, sustainability, product quality, and profitability in support of the commercial sector and for the benefit of consumers. In order to achieve these goals, it is important to understand the genomic structure and organization of aquaculture species, and their genomic and phenomic variations, as well as the genetic basis of traits and their interrelationships. In addition, it is also important to understand the mechanisms of regulation and evolutionary conservation at the levels of genome, transcriptome, proteome, epigenome, and systems biology. With genomic information and information between the genomes and phenomes, technologies for marker/causal mutation-assisted selection, genome selection, and genome editing can be developed for applications in aquaculture. A set of genomic tools and resources must be made available including reference genome sequences and their annotations (including coding and non-coding regulatory elements), genome-wide polymorphic markers, efficient genotyping platforms, high-density and high-resolution linkage maps, and transcriptome resources including non-coding transcripts. Genomic and genetic control of important performance and production traits, such as disease resistance, feed conversion efficiency, growth rate, processing yield, behaviour, reproductive characteristics, and tolerance to environmental stressors like low dissolved oxygen, high or low water temperature and salinity, must be understood. QTL need to be identified, validated across strains, lines and populations, and their mechanisms of control understood. Causal gene(s) need to be identified. Genetic and epigenetic regulation of important aquaculture traits need to be determined, and technologies for marker-assisted selection, causal gene/mutation-assisted selection, genome selection, and genome editing using CRISPR and other technologies must be developed, demonstrated with applicability, and application to aquaculture industries.Major progress has been made in aquaculture genomics for dozens of fish and shellfish species including the development of genetic linkage maps, physical maps, microarrays, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays, transcriptome databases and various stages of genome reference sequences. This paper provides a general review of the current status, challenges and future research needs of aquaculture genomics, genetics, and breeding, with a focus on major aquaculture species in the United States: catfish, rainbow trout, Atlantic salmon, tilapia, striped bass, oysters, and shrimp. While the overall research priorities and the practical goals are similar across various aquaculture species, the current status in each species should dictate the next priority areas within the species. This paper is an output of the USDA Workshop for Aquaculture Genomics, Genetics, and Breeding held in late March 2016 in Auburn, Alabama, with participants from all parts of the United States.


Aquaculture | 2017

Cryobanking of aquatic species

S. Martínez-Páramo; Ákos Horváth; Catherine Labbé; Tiantian Zhang; Vanesa Robles; Paz Herraez; Marc Suquet; Serean Adams; Ana Viveiros; Terrence R. Tiersch; Elsa Cabrita

This review is focused on the applications of genome cryobanking of aquatic species including freshwater and marine fish, as well as invertebrates. It also reviews the latest advances in cryobanking of model species, widely used by the scientific community worldwide, because of their applications in several fields. The state of the art of cryopreservation of different cellular types (sperm, oocytes, embryos, somatic cells and primordial germ cells or early spermatogonia) is discussed focusing on the advantages and disadvantages of each procedure according to different applications. A special review on the need of standardization of protocols has also been carried out. In summary, this comprehensive review provides information on the practical details of applications of genome cryobanking in a range of aquatic species worldwide, including the cryobanks established in Europe, USA, Brazil, Australia and New Zealand, the species and type of cells that constitute these banks and the utilization of the samples preserved. Statement of relevance This review compiles the last advances on germplasm cryobanking of freshwater and marine fish species and invertebrates, with high value for commercial aquaculture or conservation. It is reviewed the most promising cryopreservation protocols for different cell types, embryos and larvae that could be applied in programs for genetic improvement, broodstock management or conservation of stocks to guarantee culture production.

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Qiaoxiang Dong

Louisiana State University

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Richard K. Cooper

Louisiana State University Agricultural Center

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Quiyang Zhang

Louisiana State University Agricultural Center

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E Hu

Louisiana State University Agricultural Center

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Rafael Cuevas-Uribe

Louisiana State University Agricultural Center

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W. Todd Monroe

Louisiana State University

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