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Detection of rare Leydig cell hypoplasia in somatic cell cloned male piglets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2005

Mi-Rung Park
Affiliation:
Major of Dairy Science, Division of Applied Life Science, GyeongSang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.
Seong-Keun Cho
Affiliation:
Major of Dairy Science, Division of Applied Life Science, GyeongSang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.
Jong-Yi Park
Affiliation:
Major of Dairy Science, Division of Applied Life Science, GyeongSang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.
So-Young Lee
Affiliation:
Major of Dairy Science, Division of Applied Life Science, GyeongSang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.
Yun-Jung Choi
Affiliation:
Major of Dairy Science, Division of Applied Life Science, GyeongSang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.
Deug-Nam Kwon
Affiliation:
Major of Dairy Science, Division of Applied Life Science, GyeongSang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.
Woo-Jin Son
Affiliation:
College of Veterinary Medicine, GyeongSang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.
Han-Geuk Seo
Affiliation:
Department of Pharmacology, College of Medicine, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.
Jin-Hoi Kim
Affiliation:
Major of Dairy Science, Division of Applied Life Science, GyeongSang National University, Jinju, GyeongNam 660-701, Korea.

Abstract

In this investigation, 22 cloned male piglets were obtained by male fetal fibroblast-cell-derived nuclear transfer. Eighteen of the cloned animals died. The two cell lines did not differ significantly with regard to efficiency of live piglet production. The gross anatomy of the testes of male piglets that died was normal. However, one piglet displayed Leydig cell hypoplasia (LCH). No anatomical defects were detected in the testes of other cloned male piglets. TUNEL analysis of the testis with LCH revealed significant apoptosis in the Leydig cells, while apoptosis was rarely detected in Sertoli cells and spermatogonia. In contrast, testes from the remaining 17 piglets that died appeared normal in size, and their Sertoli and Leydig cell numbers were comparable to those in control piglet testes. Although cloned piglets were derived from fibroblasts obtained from the same fetus, phenotypic instability between cells used for the production of somatic cell cloned piglets suggests that abnormalities in male cloned piglets are caused not by technical problems and/or reprogramming effects, but rather by epigenetically and/or genetically damaged cell-specific effects.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 Cambridge University Press

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