Thursday, 7 February 2013

What Would You Do For A Klondike Dog?




Pereira, R. M., and Marques, C. C. 2008. Animal oocyte and embryo cryopreservation. Cell Tissue Banking. 9:267-277. doi 10.11007/s10561-008-9075-2



                                                                  http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Feb13/KlondikeJordan.jpg

This is Klondike, a beagle-labrador retriever mix. Not only is he an adorable puppy, he was born from a frozen embryo. Cryopreservation of embryos is a crucial step for the conservation of animals (Pereira et al., 2008). Klondike plays a huge role in the development of the cryopreservation process. Embryos (and oocytes) can undergo considerable morphological and functional damage during this process. Depending on the species and the stage of development, differences in survival and development vary (Pereira et al., 2008). Two methods for preserving embryos are currently used: slow freezing and vitrification. The most successful method has proven to be vitrification.

According to wikipedia, vitrification is "the transformation of a substance to glass by rapidly cooling a liquid through the glass transition." This is how cryopreservation works. Biological processes that would otherwise cause cell death are stopped. The only issue with this method is the thawing process, where the most damage can occur if a cryoprotectant is not used.

Researchers from Cornell's Baker Institute of Animal Health and the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute worked with the cryopreservation process to freeze fertilized eggs. This provides an avenue to help repopulate endangered species. Since dogs are only able to have litters once or twice a year, the cryopreservation process is used to coordinate the proper timing to implant an embryo into a surrogate.

Alex Travis, a Baker faculty member, stated that "dogs have remarkably different reproduction than any other mammal". Therefore, determining the differences in reproduction for many mammals will "help preserve genetic diversity of endangered animals through assisted reproduction". The process of cryopreservation and storage of embryos will allow us to conserve the complete genetic complement of father and mother (Pereira et al., 2008), and will allow us to protect and manage endangered species more effectively.


This is the vitrification process for freezing the embryos (Pereira et al., 2008)

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14 comments:

  1. Interesting way to conserve animals

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  2. That's really interesting! It's amazing what science is able to do.

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  3. Ok... that is interesting. Reminds me of a movie I once saw... Titan AE, I think it was. Basically they had a DNA database for all living critters on earth in the hopes of replicating earth if the need arose.

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  4. This is a pretty cool idea. (Also a very clever title for your blog)
    I wonder how far this idea has come or how much current research is going on.

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  5. I have been singing the stupid klondike bar song in my head the whole time that I read this. This could be a really cool technology, but I wonder what kind of effects surrogates could have on the offspring (if they were more different than different breeds of dogs).

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    1. That's a good point. I would assume you would need to use the same animal...unless some animals have exactly the same reproduction? I don't think they used any genetic material from the surrogates (i.e. eggs). But yeah, that could be something they could look into.

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  6. Very cool! The whole concept seems so sci-fi.

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  7. I watched a television show once on cloning people's dogs. A different process than this one, but people were paying upwards of 10,000$ to clone their (past) beloved pets... I thought it was crazy. But in a conservation sense I think it's quite ingenious!

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  8. Interesting, but scary. I'm not sure how I feel about this as a mechanism to conserve animal species. I feel like this is a little "ultimate human control" for me. Are they only doing this in dog's so far?

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  9. Very sc-fi and very cool. I have to agree with Rolena's point a little bit though. Seems like a demonstration of human control. It just seems like a highly unnatural way to preserve nature.

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  10. Cryopreservation sounds like such an interesting idea. I hope them put more research into seeing if this method could work for threatened species

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  11. Wow this is cutting edge stuff eh. I can totally see how useful this could be for populations experiencing inbreeding depression. We should freeze a bunch of embryos of a bunch of endangered mammals so that if they are ever experiencing inbreeding depression we can introduce individuals with new genetic material to save them from inbreeding depression! However this is kinda weird because it might end up being the case that we are encouraging the mating of a great great grandma to her great great grandson or something like that... weird.

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  12. wouldn't there be some problems with this? What if an animal born from a frozen embryo has been frozen long enough that it's immune system is not "up to date"?

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  13. I like how you included a picture of the process. Technology is fantastic! Can't wait to see where this goes.

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