IETS 2018 Program Book Final
IETS 2018 Program Book Final
IETS 2018 Program Book Final
PROGRAM
BOOK
Program Book
44th Annual Conference of the
International Embryo Technology Society
Shangri-La Hotel
Bangkok, Thailand
January 13–16, 2018
The Pioneer Award is bestowed by the International Embryo Technology Society (IETS) to
recognize individuals who have made seminal contributions to the development of embryo-
based technologies.
Previous Recipients
Exhibit Information
Ballroom I
Setup
Saturday, January 13 09:00–17:00
Exhibits open
Sunday, January 14 09:00–19:00
18:00–19:00 (Reception)
Monday, January 15 09:00–17:00
Tuesday, January 16 08:30–13:00
Teardown
Tuesday, January 16 14:00–17:00
Details on the exhibitors can be found in the Exhibit Directory on page 49.
Badges
As a security requirement, we request that all participants wear their conference name badges to all sessions and
social functions.
Climate
In January, the sun shines for at least 9 hours per day, with on average 2 days of rainfall during the month.
Around 10 mm of rain falls throughout January, with temperatures generally settling between 21°C (69°F) and
32°C (90°F).
Electricity
In Thailand the standard voltage is 220 V and the frequency is 50 Hz. You can use your electric appliances in
Thailand if the standard voltage in your country is between 220 and 240 V (as in the United Kingdom, Europe,
Australia, and most of Asia and Africa). Manufacturers take these small deviations into account. If the stan-
dard voltage in your country is in the range of 100 to 127 V (as in the United States, Canada, and most South
American countries), you will need a voltage converter in Thailand.
Registration Fees
All registration fees will be paid in US dollars or credit card purchases.
Messages
Any messages received for conference delegates will be posted on the message board located near the registration
desk.
Refreshments
Morning and afternoon refreshments and lunch are included in your registration fee this year and are provided
during the scheduled break times in the exhibit area located in Ballroom I.
Friday, January 12
09:00–17:00 IETS Board of Governors meeting (The Chairman’s Room)
09:00–13:00 HASAC Research Subcommittee meeting (Valley I)
14:00–18:00 HASAC Regulatory Subcommittee meeting (Valley I)
16:00–19:00 Registration (Board Room)
Saturday, January 13
07:00–18:00 Registration (Ballroom Foyer)
08:30–15:45 CANDES Preconference Symposium (Ballroom II)
Monitoring and Controlling Ovarian Activity in CANDES
12:00–17:00 Commercial exhibit setup and poster setup (Ballroom I and Foyer)
16:00–19:00 Morulas Workshop (The Study)
Assessment of Mammalian Embryo Quality: Invasive and Non-Invasive Techniques
Featured speakers: George Seidel, Colorado State University, USA; Heiner Niemann, Friedrich-
Loeffler Institute, Germany; and Jeremy Thompson, University of Adelaide, Australia
16:00–20:00 IETS Foundation Board of Trustees meeting (Garden Gallery)
Sunday, January 14
07:00–18:00 Registration (Ballroom Foyer)
07:00–08:30 Poster setup (Ballroom I and Foyer)
07:00–08:30 Past Presidents’ breakfast (Valley II)
07:00–08:30 Graduate and Undergraduate Student Competition Presenters’ breakfast with IETS Foundation
education chair (Valley I)
09:00–19:00 Commercial exhibits (Ballroom I and Foyer)
08:30–08:45 Opening and welcome: Trudee Fair and Daniel Salamone (Ballrooms II and III)
Monday, January 15
07:00–18:00 Registration (Ballroom Foyer)
08:00–17:00 Commercial exhibits (Ballroom I and Foyer)
Session IV: The Epigenetics of Building an Embryo and Stem Cell (Ballrooms II and III)
Session co-chairs: Daniel F. Salamone, Universidad de Buenos Aires, and Hayley Benham, Colorado State
University, USA
13:30–14:15 Methylation mechanisms and biomechanical effectors controlling cell fate
Tiziana A. L. Brevini, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
14:15–15:00 Transcriptional and epigenetic control of cell fate decisions in early embryo
Ramiro Alberio, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom
15:00–15:30 Peter Farin Trainee Award Winners Presentations (Ballrooms II and III)
15:30–16:00 Refreshment break/poster viewing and exhibits (Ballroom I and Foyer)
Concurrent Forum
16:00–18:00 Practitioners’ Forum (Myanmar)
Chair: Richard Fry
Current and Future Status of Reproductive Technologies
Topics: AI—
MOET—Rainer Saner, Swissgenetics
IVF—John Hepburn, Animal Breeding Services Ltd.
Cloning—Andres Gambini, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Tuesday, January 16
07:30–08:30 Organizational meeting of the IETS Board of Governors (The Chairman’s Room)
08:00–15:00 Registration (Ballroom Foyer)
08:30–13:00 Commercial exhibits (Ballroom I and Foyer)
Section Editors
Charles Rosenkrans, Student Competition Christine Wrenzycki, Gene Expression
Joao Bastista Borges, Artificial Insemination Hiroaki Funahashi, IVF/IVP
Daniel Salamone, Cloning/Nuclear Transfer John Kastelic, Male Physiology
Pierre Comizzoli, Cryopreservation/Cryobiology Trudee Fair, Oocyte Activation
Pete Hansen, Developmental Biology Rebecca Krisher, Oocyte Maturation
Pat Lonergan, Early Pregnancy/Pregnancy Daniel Salamone, Sexing
Recognition Katrin Hinrichs, Sperm Injection
Alfonso Gutiérrez-Adán, Embryo Culture Tiziana Brevini, Stem Cells
Marcelo Bertolini, Embryo Manipulation Osamu Dochi, Superovulation
Jeremy Block, Embryo Transfer Carol Keefer, Transgenesis
Ann Van Soom, Epidemiology/Diseases Charles Rosenkrans, Undergraduate Poster
Barbara Durrant, Exotic Species Competition
Fulvio Gandolfi, Folliculogenesis/Oogenesis
Poster Numbers
Posters are identified by the number corresponding to the abstract number in Reproduction, Fertility and
Development 2018; 30 (1). Numbering of the posters begins at 1 and ends at 208.
Setup
Odd-numbered posters can be put up from 12:00 to 17:00 on Saturday, January 13, 2018, and from 06:30 to
08:00 on Sunday, January 14, 2018. They will remain up until 14:00 on Monday, January 15. All odd-numbered
posters must be removed by 14:00, Monday, January 15.
Even-numbered posters can be put up on Monday at 14:00. They will remain up until 13:00 on Tuesday, January
16.
Poster Session I
Presentations by authors of odd-numbered abstracts (e.g., 7, 9, 11) in Reproduction, Fertility and Development
2018; 30 (1) as well as the Student Competition finalist and Undergraduate finalist poster presentations will take
place Monday, January 15, 2018, from 10:00 to 12:00. Odd-numbered posters for the poster competition will also
be judged on Monday, January 15, from 10:00 to 12:00.
Poster Session II
Presentations by authors of even-numbered abstracts (e.g., 8, 10, 12) in Reproduction, Fertility and Development
2018; 30 (1) will take place Tuesday, January 16, 2018, from 10:30 to 12:30. Even-numbered posters for the
poster competition will be judged on Tuesday, January 16, from 10:30 to 12:30.
Teardown
Poster teardown for the even-numbered posters will take place from 12:30 to 14:00 Tuesday, January 16, 2018.
Posters that are not taken down by 14:00 on Tuesday will be taken down and discarded.
Student Competition
1 Microinjection of CPE-binding protein polyadenylated mRNA increases developmental
competence of bovine oocytes in vitro
M. Yang, Z. Fan, and I. A. Polejaeva
2 Response to treatment with human chorionic gonadotropin on pregnancy rate of heat-stressed
lactating cows: Interactions with parity and genotype
A. M. Zolini, W. Ortiz, E. Eliab, D. Serdal, and P. J. Hansen
3 Animal protein–free semen extender for fixed-time insemination of beef cows
S. X. Yang, E. M. Zwiefelhofer, G. P. Adams, and M. Anzar
4 Relationship between ovarian vascularity, cumulus-oocyte morphology and luteal development in
four-month-old calves after FSH stimulation
S. L. Caunce, A. R. T. Krause, F. C. F. Dias, G. P. Adams, and J. Singh
5 Live offspring produced from reproductive material recovered during the annual cull of bison
from Yellowstone National Park
H. Benham, M. McCollum, P. Nol, B. Frey, J. Rhyan, and J. Barfield
6 CRISPR-generated ZP4 knockout rabbits exhibit impaired in vivo pre-implantation development
I. Lamas-Toranzo, N. F. Balvís, P. L. Lorenzo, P. G. Rebollar, M. Avilés, and P. Bermejo-Álvarez
Artificial Insemination
7 Ovarian follicular dynamics and conception rate in Bos indicus cows with different antral follicle
counts subjected to timed artificial insemination
F. Morotti, R. Moretti, G. M. Gomes dos Santos, K. C. Silva-Santos, and M. M. Seneda
8 Effect of single layer centrifugation with Percoll Plus® of fresh bull semen on plasma membrane
stability and lipid peroxidation after cryopreservation
T. E. Cruz, A. Martins Jr., F. N. Marqui, T. I. U. Berton, C. P. Freitas-Dell’Aqua, D. G. Souza,
and S. H. V. Perri
9 Single layer centrifugation of bull semen through Percoll Plus® before cryopreservation
A. Martins Jr., F. N. Marqui, T. E. Cruz, T. I. H. Berton, D. G. Souza, and S. H. V. Perri
10 Evaluation of frozen sperm quality after single layer centrifugation with Percoll Plus® of fresh
bull semen
F. N. Marqui, A. Martins Jr., T. E. Cruz, T. I. U. Berton, C. P. Freitas-Dell’Aqua, D. G. Souza,
and S. H. V. Perri
11 Early induction of luteolysis in fixed-time artificial insemination protocols increases fertility in
beef cows
J. B. Borges, A. B. Machado, E. Pradebon, M. Dias, M. Bernardi, and M. Wiltbank
12 Ovulation timing following an aromatase inhibitor-based synchronization protocol in beef heifers
and cows
E. M. Zwiefelhofer, W. Lillico, and G. P. Adams
13 Pre-synchronization by induction of a dominant follicle using a progesterone device in a
GnRH-based-ovulation synchronization protocol in lactating dairy cows
M. P. Bottino, L. A. C. L. DaSilva, L. M. S. Simoes, G. Santos, I. Y. H. Martinez, P. A. M. Barros,
J. C. DeSouza, P. S. Baruzelli, and J. N. S. Sales
Cloning/Nuclear Transfer
23 Production of genetically modified founder pigs as models for human diseases
H. Callesen, Y. Liu, H. S. Pedersen, C. B. Sørensen, and J. F. Bentzon
24 Evaluation of latrunculin A for the activation of hand-made cloning (HMC) porcine embryos
F. K. Castañeda, N. G. Canel, G. V. Landschoot, A. De Stéfano, R. J. Bevacqua, and D. F.
Salamone
25 Rescue of the hematoendothelial phenotypes in the ETV2-null cloned pig via embryo
complementation
G. Maeng, X. Pan, S. Das, K.-D. Choi, N. Koyano-Nakagawa, M. G. Garry, and D. J. Garry
26 Drugs that modify epigenetics…What do they do to porcine clones?
C. P. Buemo, A. Gambini, L. N. Moro, N. Canel, and D. F. Salamone
27 Quisinostat, a potent histone deacetylase inhibitor, regulates the expression of pluripotency- and
reprogramming-related genes on somatic cell nuclear transferred porcine embryos
A. Taweechaipaisankul, J.-X. Jin, S. Lee, G. A. Kim, and B. C. Lee
28 Generation of immunoglobulin heavy constant mu (IGHM) knockout goats using CRISPR/Cas9
and somatic cell nuclear transfer
Z. Fan, M. Regouski, A. J. Van Wettere, Z. Wang, E. Sullivan, and I. A. Polejaeva
Cryopreservation/Cryobiology
40 Gene expression profiling of in vitro-produced blastocysts derived from in vitro-matured bovine
oocytes vitrified/warmed in media supplemented with a biopolymer produced by an Antarctic
bacterium
N. Arcarons, M. Vendrell, M. Yeste, M. E. Mercadé, M. López-Béjar, and T. Mogas
41 Effects of dimethyl sulfoxide- or glycerol-based vitrification protocols on zona pellucida
hardening in mature bovine oocytes
K. D. Rogers, B. A. Foster, E. J. Guiterrez, F. A. Diaz, and K. R. Bondioli
42 Glycerol dilution in the straw by mixing methanol and sucrose for bovine embryo
cryopreservation
T. T. Takeda
43 Cryopreservation of bovine sperm using antifreeze polyamino-acid
T. Fujikawa, S. Imamura, M. Tokumaru, T. Ando, Y. Gen, S.-H. Hyon, and C. Kubota
44 Proliferation and antral formation of preantral follicle within cryopreserved cat ovarian tissue
transplanted into nude mice
N. Tanpradit and K. Chatdarong
45 DNA fragmentation of epididymal freeze-dried ram spermatozoa impairs embryo development
L. Palazzese, D. A. Anzalone, J. Gosálve?, P. Loi, and J. Saragusty
20 44th Annual Conference
46 Effect of Bioxcell® and Triladyl® extenders on washed semen of South African indigenous bucks
L. P. Nethenzheni, M. L. Mphaphathi, N. C. Negota, and T. L. Nedambale
47 A new device and method for successful vitrification of in vitro-produced ovine embryos
S. Ledda, J. M. Kelly, S. K. Walker, Y. Natan, and A. Arav
48 Effect of dimethyl sulfoxide- or glycerol-based vitrification protocols on meiotic spindle of in
vitro-matured bovine oocytes
E. J. Gutierrez, F. A. Diaz, B. A. Foster, and K. R. Bondioli
49 Developmental potential of dromedary camel oocytes vitrified at the germinal vesicle stage:
Effects of different cryoprotectant combinations and cryo-carriers
M. Fathi, A. R. Moawad, and M. R. Badr
50 Effects of cathepsin B inhibitor E64 on the survival rate of cryopreserved semen from Korean
brindled bulls
S. W. Kim, M.-S. Kim, C.-L. Kim, and I. S. Jeon
51 Effect of cryoprotectant exposure time on development of vitrified-warmed immature equine
oocytes
H. S. Canesin, J. G. Brom-de-Luna, Y.-H. Choi, A. M. Pereira, G. G. Macedo, and K. Hinrichs
52 Difference of seminal plasma proteins in good- and poor-freezability boar ejaculates
J. Rungruangsak, J. Suwimonteerabutr, S. Asawakarn, K. Buranaamnuay, N. Chantaravisoot, T.
Pisitkun, and P. Tummaruk
53 Cryopreservation of sheep ovarian tissue using different cryoprotectants
S. Akerke and T. Yerzhan
54 Effect of different cryopreservation protocols for sheep embryonic stem cells
N. Ibraimova, A. Seisenbayeva, and Y. Toishibekov
Developmental Biology
55 The role of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerases in porcine cumulus–oocyte complex during in vitro
maturation and embryonic development
D. H. Kim, S. T. Shin, and H. T. Lee
56 Sirtinol treatment influences preimplatation development of porcine embryos via regulation of
autophagy and apoptosis
M. G. Kim, S. T. Shin, H. D. Shin, and H. T. Lee
57 Disruption of TET1 leads to abnormal expression of pluripotency-related genes in porcine
embryos
K. Uh, J. Ryu, and K. Lee
58 Evidence of metabolic compartmentalization or zonation in the bovine placenta: Significance for
the regulation of placental function and fetal growth
E. Ticiani, C. R. Lazzarotto, R. P. C. Gerger, B. R. Wilhelm, V. H. V. Rodrigues, J. L. Rodrigues,
M. A. Miglino, L. R. Bertolini, and M. Bertolini
59 Selected reaction monitoring-based absolute quantification of developmentally relevant proteins
in early bovine embryos reveals differences between in vitro and in vivo embryo culture and
between different maternal metabolic stages
G. J. Arnold, K. Gegenfurtner, T. Frohlich, D. R. Deutsch, P. Salvetti, N. Forde, P. Lonergan, U.
Besenfelder, and E. Wolf
60 Reproductive performance after timed artificial insemination followed by timed embryo transfer
of in vitro-produced embryos in beef cattle
G. Holguin-Sanabria, F. J. F. Collares, E. P. Silva, L. H. Aguiar, P. Rodriguez-Villamil, F. L.
Ongaratto, P. V. Marchioretto, M. C. Silveira, J. L. Rodrigues, and M. Bertolini
Early Pregnancy
67 Influence of metabolic status and genetic merit for fertility on proteomic composition of bovine
uterine luminal fluid
K. Gegenfurtner, T. Fröhlich, M. Kösters, E. O. Riedel, S. Fritz, P. Salvetti, N. Forde, P.
Lonergan, E. Wolf, and G. J. Arnold
69 Can bovine sperm interaction with the oviduct cells after artificial insemination affect the
transcriptome profile of the oviduct?
J. O. Carvalho, R. Sartori, P. L. Monteiro, L. O. Leme, and M. A. N. Dode
70 Effect of ovulation stimulus on biochemical composition of the oviduct of alpaca (Vicugna
pacos)
F. Y. Hilari, J. C. Villanueva, W. F. Huanca, B. Lira, and W. Huanca
Embryo Culture
71 The effect of two different in vitro culture media and mice embryo groupings on hatchability
after 24 hours of culture
N. C. Negota, M. L. Mphaphathi, L. P. Nethenzheni, T. L. Rammutla, N. R. Serota, and T. L.
Nedambale
72 Protective effects of C-phycocyanin on the developmental competence of porcine parthenotes
Y.-J. Niu, N.-H. Kim, and X.-S. Cui
73 Fatty acid supplementation in culture medium with reduced nutrient concentrations improves
bovine blastocyst development compared with standard culture medium
R. Pasquariello, J. R. Herrick, Y. Yuan, A. F. Ermisch, J. Becker, L. Yao, C. Broeckling, W. B.
Schoolcraft, J. P. Barfield, and R. L. Krisher
74 Treatment with melatonin during in vitro culture enhances porcine parthenogenetically activated
embryo development
G. A. Kim, J.-X. Jin, S. Lee, A. Taweechaipaisankul, and B. C. Lee
75 Improvement of developmental competence of bovine in vitro-produced embryos by using
charcoal:dextran-stripped fetal bovine serum on in vitro culture media
A. Mesalam, R. Kong, B.-H. Choi, K.-L. Lee, B.-Y. Park, M.-J. Son, J.-I. Jin, and I.-K. Kong
Embryo Manipulation
82 Compensation of the growth and development of individually transferred bovine bisected
embryos
E. I. Schild, A. E. Ynsaurralde-Rivolta, S. López-Valiente, S. Maresca, C. Munar, N. Bosetti, M.
Curti, J. I. Jaca, R. Bevacqua, A. Rogberg, and D. F. Salamone
Embryo Transfer
83 Effect of synchronization treatment and estrus expression on conception rates and pregnancy
losses in recipients receiving in vitro-produced embryos
A. Cedeño, P. Tribulo, A. Tribulo, J. L. Barajas, J. Ortega, S. Andrada, D. Lozano, I. Monguillot,
A. Brandan, R. Tribulo, H. Tribulo, and G. A. Bo
84 Effect of embryo stage and cryopreservation method on pregnancy rates obtained following the
transfer of in vivo-derived ovine embryos on small-scale farms in Thailand
S. Khunmanee, J. Suwimonteerabutr, M. Techakumphu, and T. Swangchan-Uthai
85 Influence of short-term storage on gene expression of equine embryos
G. D. A. Gastal, D. Scarlet, R. Ertl, and C. Aurich
86 Difficulty of transfer of in vivo-derived bovine embryos and route of administration of flunixin
meglumine at the time of transfer may affect pregnancy rate
J. Duran, D. Argudo, S. Bravo, C. Soria, G. Guevara, and R. Alberio
87 Effect of treatment with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) on pregnancy rates of
recipient alpacas post-embryo transfer
H. W. Vivanco-Mackie, M. D. P. Salazar, M. Miguel-Gonzales, C. R. Youngs, and M. Asparrin
88 Effect of follicular ablation and GnRH on recipient synchrony in Holstein heifers
J. M. Palomino, F.-X. Grand, C. Vigneault, P. Blondin, and M.-A. Sirard
89 Comparative quantification of plasma progesterone through radioimmumoassay and enzyme-
linked fluorescent assay techniques in cattle
J. M. R. Pérsico, C. Bianchi, C. Tapia, S. Raggio, and I. A. Marchetti
Exotic Species
92 Sperm cryopreservation in the Burmese python (Python bivittatus) as a model for endangered
snakes
C. Young, N. Ravida, M. Rochford, and B. Durrant
93 Oestrous synchronisation studies in a marsupial
R. R. Witt, L. A. Hinds, and J. C. Rodger
94 Semen parameters from a captive population of the endangered Chacoan peccary (Catagonus
wagneri) in Paraguay
C. C. Goblet, A. E. Newell-Fugate, G. West, and J. M. Campos-Krauer
95 Successful ovum pick-up-in vitro embryo production in Lidia cattle in France
G. Gamarra Lazo, S. Lacaze, and D. Di Scala
96 Follicular fluid and serum biochemical composition in alpacas (Vicugna pacos) with different
nutritional planes
W. Huanca, F. Hilari, M. Ticona, B. Lira, J. C. Villanueva, and W. F. Huanca
97 Social dominance does not affect semen quality in African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus)
F. Van den Berghe, M. C. J. Paris, Z. Sarnyai, M. B. Briggs, R. P. Millar, A. Ganswindt, and D. B.
B. P. Paris
98 Assessing endangered felid Puma concolor sperm fertility by in vitro fertilization with domestic
cat oocytes
M. Duque, A. Sestelo, and D. F. Salamone
99 In vitro development of alpaca embryos obtained by bisection
L. Landeo, R. S. Molina, M. E. Zuñiga, T. R. Gastelu, C. Sotacuro, and J. A. Ruiz
Folliculogenesis/Oogenesis
100 Use of seminal plasma, human chorionic gonadotropin, and follicular ablation on the interval to
follicular wave emergency and dominant follicle in alpacas (Vicugna pacos)
W. F. Huanca, F. Y. Hilari, J. C. Villanueva, M. Uchuari, and W. Huanca
101 Effects of active immunization against GnRH in oocyte donors with cystic ovarian disease
O. A. C. Faria, L. R. O. Dias, L. Leme, G. Fernandes, A. A. G. Fidelis, L. G. B. Siqueira, and J.
H. M. Viana
102 In vitro embryo production and oocyte quality in Bos indicus beef cows selected for fertility
characteristics
G. L. Vasconcelos, R. Maculan, N. Alves, A. L. A. P. L. Ribeiro, A. W. B. Silva, E. V. Cunha, G. M.
Moreira, J. A. S. Viafara, A. S. B. Guimaraes, C. V. Ribeiro, J. R. V. Silva, J. N. S. Sales, T. L. C.
Pinto, M. S. El Azzi, and J. C. DeSouza
103 The tunica albuginea increases in thickness and density correlatively with the age of the patient in
human ovaries
P. Ferré, J. Otsuki, O. Takayama, H. Motohashi, T. Wakai, M. Nakatsuka, and H. Funahashi
Gene Expression
108 Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals blastomere heterogeneity and early lineage specification
events in bovine embryos during major embryonic genome activation
I. Lavagi, S. Krebs, K. Simmet, V. Zakhartchenko, E. Wolf, and H. Blum
109 Dosage compensation of the X chromosome in ovine embryos, late gestation, and adult somatic
tissues
J. Duan, K. Flock, M. Zhang, A. K. Jones, S. M. Pillai, M. L. Hoffman, H. Jiang, S. A. Zinn, S. A.
Reed, K. E. Govoni, N. K. Jue, R. O’Neill, Z. Jiang, and X. Tian
110 Temporal changes in endometrial gene expression between ipsi- and contralateral uterine horns in
cattle
J. M. Sánchez, C. Passaro, N. Forde, S. Behura, J. A. Browne, D. J. Mathew, S. T. Butler, T. E.
Spencer, and P. Lonergan
111 Inhibition of avian influenza virus by blocking specific sialyltransferases
E. N. Antonova, O. V. Glazova, A. V. Gaponova, N. A. Volkova, and P. Y. Volchkov
112 Identification of solute carrier family 5 member 9 (SLC5A9) as biomarker of in vivo and in vitro
oocyte developmental competence
E. F. M. Manzoni, V. Bocchi, C. Galli, M. G. Strillacci, G. Stradaioli, T. A. L. Brevini, and F.
Gandolfi
113 Specific impacts of mild feed restriction on gene expression of endometrial luminal, glandular
and stromal cells in postpartum dairy cows
W. Chankeaw, S. Lignier, M. Raliou, T. Ntallaris, C. Richard, Y. Guo, O. Sandra, G. Andersson, P.
Humblot, and G. Charpigny
114 Insulin-like growth factor (IGF)2 and IGF2 receptor (IGF2R) murine blastocyst transcriptional
response after high gaseous pressure exposure at 8-cell stage
B. S. Becker, F. J. F. Collares, A. V. Gonsiorosky, C. Rodrigues de Freitas, D. A. Mentz, L. R.
Bertolini, M. Bertolini, and J. L. Rodrigues
115 In vivo transcriptomic response of bovine oviduct epithelial cells to the early embryo
B. Rodríguez-Alonso, M. Hamdi, J. M. Sánchez, A. Gutierrez-Adán, P. Lonergan, and D. Rizos
116 In vitro transcriptomic response of bovine oviduct epithelial cells to direct or indirect embryo
contact
M. Hamdi, B. Rodríguez-Alonso, A. Almansa-Ordonez, A. Gutierrez-Adán, P. Lonergan, and D.
Rizos
117 Subclinical mastitis reduces ovulation and oocyte quality in milk-producing cows
G. Santos, M. P. Bottino, M. B. D. Ferreira, J. C. Silveira, A. C. F. C. M. Avila, A. Bridi, J. C.
DeSouza, and J. N. S. Sales
IVF/IVP
120 Theophylline: The key for bulls with low in vitro blastocyst rates?
S. M. Bernal-Ulloa and S. E. Ulbrich
121 Comparing two superstimulation protocols prior to ovum pick-up in dromedary camel
T. Ararooti, A. Niasari-Naslaji, and K. Razavi
122 A new maturation medium improves porcine embryo production in vitro
A. Lucas-Hahn, B. Petersen, M. Nowak-Imialek, U. Baulain, R. Becker, H.-M. Eylers, K.-G.
Hadeler, P. Hassel, and H. Niemann
123 In vitro embryo production in lyophilized in vitro culture medium as a method to increase the
medium’s shelf-life
M. Rubessa, F. Salerno, D. Weisgerber, B. Gasparrini, B. Harley, and M. Wheeler
124 Cell count of bovine in vitro-produced blastocysts after in vitro maturation in glass versus plastic
vials
J. O. Secher, N. Hashem, J. H. Pryor, C. R. Long, J. Docherty, B. M. Avery, M. Ivask, P. Hyttel,
and L. B. Strøbech
125 Effect of complexed trace minerals on oocyte and embryo production
F. G. Dantas, R. V. O. Filho, R. S. Carvalho, G. A. Franco, S. T. Reese, C. R. Abbott, R. R.
Payton, J. L. Edwards, J. K. Smith, J. R. Russell, and K. G. Pohler
126 A comparison of two different follicular coasting periods for in vitro embryo production in Indian
Nelore cattle
P. Tiwari, S. Zawar, J. H. Pryor, C. R. Looney, R. Kaushik, A. Sahare, and J. Hazarika
127 l-Carnitinesupplementation during in vitro maturation improves developmental competence of
canine oocytes
A. Salama, M. Fathi, M. R. Badr, and A. R. Moawad
128 Evidence that pregnancy-associated serum protein A (PAPP-A) plays role on bovine in vitro
embryo production
A. B. Giroto, F. F. Franchi, P. K. Fontes, M. A. Maioli, G. P. Nogueira, M. F. G. Nogueira, and A.
C. S. Castilho
129 Embryo production from fully grown and growing stage oocytes in Japanese Black calves
S. Matoba, K. Takeda, Y. Ohkubo, M. Hirako, and Y. Hirao
130 In vitro production of Hybrid Desert Bighorn × Domestic sheep embryos using frozen-thawed
epididymal semen from a hunter-harvested ram
M. G. Licea, J. E. H. Pichardo, J. L. Rodríguez, A. García-Contreras, B. C. Rosales, M. Palma-
Irizarry, S. Romo, and M. E. Kjelland
131 Effect of oviductal fluid during in vitro culture on bovine embryo development and quality
R. Emmerstorfer, K. Radefeld, V. Havlicek, U. Besenfelder, H. Yu, C. Mayrhofer, C. Vogl, G.
Brem, and S. Papp
132 The developmental competence of bovine oocytes exposed to progesterone and luteotrophic
hormones during the second step of two-step maturation
G. Singina, I. Lebedeva, T. Taradajnic, E. Shedova, A. Lopukhov, and N. Zinovieva
Male Physiology
139 Sperm transmembrane protein 95 (TMEM95) is required for sperm-oocyte interaction and
successful fertilization but not mucus penetration in cattle
B. Fernandez-Fuertes and P. Lonergan
140 Endocrine profiling in prepubertal stallions with abnormal testicular development
D. Scarlet, J. Kuhl, M. Wulf, N. Ille, M. Köhne, A. Conley, and C. Aurich
141 Antioxidant supplementation alleviates DNA damage in boar sperm induced by tropical heat
stress
S. T. Peña Jr., B. Gummow, A. J. Parker, and D. B. B. P. Paris
142 Isolation of the quail spermatogonia
E. R. Mennibaeva, N. A. Volkova, E. K. Tomgorova, L. A. Volkova, V. A. Bagirov, and N. A.
Zinovieva
143 The dynamics of spermatogenesis in guinea fowls
N. A. Volkova, A. N. Vetokh, I. P. Novgorodova, A. V. Dotsev, and N. A. Zinovieva
144 Dynamic of sperm subpopulations in red deer capacitated samples
M. Ramón, M. Iniesta-Cuerda, A. Martín-Maestro, P. Peris-Frau, I. Sánchez-Ajofrín, M. R.
Fernández-Santos, J. Garde, and A. J. Soler
145 Effect of dietary organic zinc levels on boar (Sus scrofa domesticus) sperm DNA fragmentation
dynamics
A. Martínez, J. Gosálvez, C. López-Fernández, J. A. G. González, C. G. Artiga, Y. D. L. Ortega,
M. E. Kjelland, and A. García-Contreras
146 Effect of pH on rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) sperm motility using five extender
solutions
M. Á. Peralta-Martínez, S. R. García, M. E. Kjelland, and H. González-Márquez
Oocyte Activation
152 Activation of bovine oocytes using the zinc chelator TPEN
C. L. Timlin, K. Uh, V. R. G. Mercadante, and K. Lee
153 Fertilisation of cattle oocytes is linked to novel waves of a Ca2+ fluorophore in cumulus cells
H. J. McLennan, M. L. Sutton-McDowall, S. Heng, and J. G. Thompson
Oocyte Maturation
154 Exosomes in follicular fluid protect the bovine oocyte from heat shock
T. A. Rodrigues, A. Alli, F. F. Paula-Lopes, and P. Hansen
155 Oocyte maturation in lyophilized in vitro maturation medium as a method to increase the
medium’s shelf-life
M. Rubessa, D. Weisgerber, S. Bessler, J. Bertels, B. Harley, and M. Wheeler
157 Sodium fluoride exposure exerts toxic effects on porcine oocyte maturation
Z.-W. Nie, S. Liang, and X.-S. Cui
158 The effect of follicular wave phase at time of ovum pick-up on bovine oocyte cytoplasmic
maturation and developmental competence
B. A. Foster, F. A. Diaz, E. J. Gutierrez, and K. R. Bondioli
159 Effect of commercial embryo holding medium on development and quality of immature bovine
oocytes
M. Catteeuw, O. B. Pascottini, G. Opsomer, and A. Van Soom
160 Exposure to cadmium affects oocyte and embryo competence in cattle
C. De Canditiis, N. Pagano, V. Franco, I. Paradiso, É. C. Dos Santos, G. Zullo, G. Albero, and B.
Gasparrini
161 Cumulus cell luteinization is enhanced during aging of bovine oocytes matured in vitro
I. Y. Lebedeva, G. N. Singina, S. V. Uzbekova, P. Papillier, E. N. Shedova, A. V. Lopukhov, and O.
S. Mityashova
Sexing
175 Testis-specific protein Y encoded copy number variation in in vitro-produced bovine early
embryos
N. Y. Rho, L. A. Favetta, T. Mogas, and W. A. King
International Embryo Technology Society 29
Sperm Injection
176 Localization and quantitative expression of phospholipase C zeta in equine sperm using
commercial antibodies
R. A. Gonzalez-Castro, J. K. Graham, and E. M. Carnevale
177 Equine sperm decondensation and blastocyst formation after conventional versus piezo-driven
intracytoplasmic sperm injection
J. G. Brom-de-Luna, R. M. Salgado, H. L. Resende, H. S. Canesin, and K. Hinrichs
Stem Cells
178 Differential behavior of porcine mesenchymal stem cells from bone marrow and adipose during
osteogenic differentiation on a glycosaminoglycan hydrogel scaffold for bone and cartilage tissue
engineering
S. A. Womack, D. J. Milner, D. W. Weisgerber, B. A. Harley, and M. B. Wheeler
179 Xenogeneic and allogeneic mesenchymal stem cell transplantation for treatment of tibial bone
fracture in mice
K. K. Bajwa, V. Sharma, S. Saini, A. Kumar, A. Thakur, S. De, S. Kumar, and D. Malakar
180 Increasing GfrA1-positive spermatogonial stem cell population of goat
V. Sharma, S. Saini, B. Aneja, A. Kumar, A. Thakur, K. K. Bajwa, S. Kumar, A. K. Mohanty, and
D. Malakar
181 Establishment of induced pluripotent stem cells from fishing cat and clouded leopard using
integration-free method for wildlife conservation
W. Sukparangsi, R. Bootsri, W. Sikeao, S. Karoon, and A. Thongphakdee
182 In vitro derivation of male germ cells from bovine bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells
J. Cortez, J. Bahamonde, J. Palomino, M. De los Reyes, C. Torres, and O. Peralta
183 In vitro generation and characterization of putative primordial germ cells derived from induced
pluripotent stem cells in cattle
F. F. Bressan, M. A. Lima, L. S. Machado, N. C. G. Pieiri, P. Fantinato-Neto, J. Therrien, F.
Perecin, L. C. Smith, and F. V. Meirelles
184 Establishment of porcine induced pluripotent stem cell lines by adding LIN 28 transcription
factor
S. Rungarunlert, W. Chakritbudsabong, S. Pamonsupornvichit, L. Sariya, R. Pronarkngver,
S. Chaiwattanarungruengpaisan, J. N. Ferreira, P. Setthawonge, P. Phakdeedindan, M.
Techakumphu, and T. Tharasanit
185 Directed differentiation of porcine induced pluripotent stem cells into all three germ layers via
embryoid body formation
W. Chakritbudsabong, S. Pamonsupornvichit, L. Sariya, R. Pronarkngver, S.
Chaiwattanarungruengpaisan, S. Klinsrithong, J. N. Ferreira, and S. Rungarunlert
186 Improving success rate of establishment and maintenance of porcine induced pluripotent stem
cells cells by investigation of colony morphology
P. Setthawong, P. Phakdeedindan, M. Techakumphu, and T. Tharasanit
187 Morphological appearance and expression of spermatogonial stem cell markers in white
rhinoceros testicular tissue
M. C. Gomez, Y. Cates, D. B. Stansfield, C. Young, R. Klee, and B. Durrant
188 The effect of vitamin B12 on the differentiation of adipose-derived stem cells into osteoblasts
T. A. Bane, J. C. Bertels, K. M. Polkoff, M. Rubessa, and M. B. Wheeler
189 The effect of vitamin K on the differentiation of adipose-derived stem cells into osteoblasts
T. A. Bane, J. C. Bertels, K. M. Polkoff, M. Rubessa, and M. B. Wheeler
Superovulation
193 Comparison of superovulatory responses to single subcutaneous FSH injection and twice-daily
intramuscular FSH injection protocols in Japanese Black cows
A. Miyoshi, M. Sugawara, Y. Kaneda, H. Sekizawa, and O. Dochi
194 Usefulness of the ultrasound imaging modalities B-mode and colour Doppler sonography and
serum progesterone concentrations for determining superovulatory ovarian responses in ewes
I. F. Ribeiro, M. G. K. Rodrigues, G. S. Maciel, J. F. Fonseca, F. Z. Brandão, P. M. Bartlewski,
and M. E. F. Oliveira
195 Are the spectral Doppler indices of the ovarian arteries predictive of ovulatory responses and
embryo yields in superovulated ewes?
M. E. F. Oliveira, Y. Tarasevych, W. R. R. Vicente, and P. M. Bartlewski
196 Fertilization rate in superovulated Criolla goats following artificial insemination or natural
mating
M. I. Cueto, J. Fernandez, M. M. Bruno-Galarraga, F. Pereyra-Bonnet, and A. Gibbons
197 The effect of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist on superovulation and estrous synchroni-
zation in female Sprague Dawley rat
Y.-K. Jin, H.-S. Bae, J.-Y. Lee, S.-Y. Yum, K.-M. Kim, O.-J. Koo, G. Jang, and M. J. Ailia
Transgenesis
198 Germline-specific expression of the murine Oct4-EGFP transgene in the pig
M. Nowak-Imialek, D. Herrmann, A. Frenzel, and H. Niemann
199 Efficient knock-out of ovine β-lactoglobulin (BLG) gene and knock-in of recombinant human
factor IX (rhFIX) under BLG native regulatory sequences in somatic cells and zygotes using
TALEN nucleases
R. J. Bevacqua, D. Carlson, R. Fernandez-Martín, A. E. Gibbons, V. Savy, N. G. Canel, G. V.
Landschoot, L. De La Rosa, F. Lange, V. Alberio, O. Briski, M. I. Gismondi, S. Ferraris, S.
Fahrenkrug, and D. Salamone
200 Optimization of individual stages of chicken transgenesis to increase efficiency
E. K. Tomgorova, E. N. Antonova, N. A. Volkova, P. Y. Volchkov, and N. A. Zinovieva
201 Spermatogonia transplantation in the chicken
A. N. Vetokh, N. A. Volkova, T. O. Kotova, E. N. Antonova, A. V. Dotsev, and N. A. Zinovieva
202 Targeting galactosyl-α-1,3-galactose (αGal) epitopes for multi-species embryo immunosurgery
M. Kurome, A. Baehr, K. Simmet, B. Kessler, E. Jemiller, M. Dahlhoff, V. Zakhartchenko, N.
Klymiuk, and E. Wolf
203 Genome modifications by Sleeping Beauty transposition and CRISPR/Cas9 to improve cow milk
composition for human consumption
A. Alessio, E. Pericuesta, I. Llamas-Toranzo, D. Forcato, A. Fili, C. Liaudat, N. Rodriguez, W.
Kues, P. Bermejo-Álvarez, and P. Bosch
DABE Forum
209 Imaging the molecular and cell dynamics that form the early mouse embryo
N. Plachta
Welcome Reception
Sunday, January 14
18:00–19:00
Ballroom I and Pre-function Foyer
Sponsored by Professional Embryo Transfer Supple Inc. (PETS)
A welcome reception will be held in Ballroom I and the Foyer of the Shangri-La Hotel from 18:00 to 19:00.
Meet the exhibitors and renew old friendships. Light hors d’oeuvres will be served with a cash bar.
Practitioners’ Forum
Monday, January 15
16:00–18:00
Myanmar
Current and future status of reproductive technologies
DABES Forum
Monday, January 15
16:00–18:00
Ballrooms II and III
Imaging the molecular and cell dynamics that form the early mouse embryo
Nicolas Plachta, Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, A*STAR, Singapore
Closing Party
Tuesday, January 16
20:45–23:45
Grand Chaopraya Cruise
Come join us for the event of the week. The closing party will be a private dinner cruise aboard the Grand
Chaopraya. There will be a Thai classical welcome dance, entertainment, dancing, buffet, and bar. The cruise will
be 3 hours and will pick up at and return to the dock of the Shangri-La Hotel. Check-in for the cruise will begin
at 20:15; the boat will leave at 20:45 sharp and return at 23:45.
(Tickets are required for this event.)
Previous Recipients
Pablo J. Ross (Scientist) 2017
Todd Stroud (Practitioner) 2017
Andrés Gambini
Andrés Gambini graduated in 2008 with honors from the University of Río Cuarto, Agronomy
and Veterinary School in Argentina. After a short private practice, he spent five years at the
University of Buenos Aires completing a PhD program and as a teacher in charge of assignments
in Animal Physiology Chair in the animal production department at Agronomy School. There, he
began his research on in vitro embryo production in horses, particularly studying new strategies
to improve equine cloning. He was part of the team that produced the first cloned horses in South
America, and their continued efforts have resulted in several scientific publications in prestigious
journals. In 2015, he started his postdoctoral study at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in
North Carolina, United States, where he studied mechanisms controlling the embryonic genome activation in
mammals. In 2017 Gambini joined, as a scientist visitor, the Melbourne University staff in Australia, where he is
continuing his research in bovine and horse cloning, ICSI, and other reproductive biotechnologies. Currently, he
is also a researcher for the National Scientific and Technical Research Council in Argentina.
Ursula Eichenlaub-Ritter
Ursula Eichenlaub-Ritter has performed studies in basic science of meiosis and germ cell forma-
tion with a focus on development, quality, and health of germ cells, especially cytogenetics,
molecular genetics, and cell und developmental biology of mammalian oocytes. Her research also
comprises studies on the safety of ART, including vitrification for fertility preservation; the
oocyte’s epigenome, proteome, cell cycle regulation, and mitochondrial activities, in particular
the relevance of age, environment, and pathologic conditions; and in vitro growth and maturation
of follicles and oocytes on oocyte and embryo quality and developmental potential.
Jon M. Oatley
Jon Oatley is the director of the Center for Reproductive Biology and an associate professor in
the School of Molecular Biosciences at Washington State University. Oatley obtained his PhD
from Washington State University in 2004, was a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Ralph
Brinster at the University of Pennsylvania, and began as an independent investigator in 2007. His
research focuses on deciphering the mechanisms that regulate formation of the germline stem cell
pool in mammalian testes during development and maintenance of the population in adulthood.
Because the actions of the germline stem cell pool provide the foundation for continual spermato-
genesis, Oatley’s research is related directly to understanding fundamental processes that underpin male fertility.
Another major interest is the development of advanced methodologies for improving food animal agriculture
through reproductive processes. Oatley’s lab is currently utilizing cutting-edge gene editing technologies to
devise tools for advancing genetic gain in livestock populations that will improve the efficiency by which an
expanding global population is fed in the coming decades. Oatley has authored more than 50 papers in top-tier
journals in the fields of reproductive and developmental biology.
Peter Sutovsky
Peter Sutovsky is professor of animal science in the College of Agriculture, Food, and Natural
Resources, University of Missouri, and professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Women’s
Health at the School of Medicine, University of Missouri Health System. Since the early 1990s,
Sutovsky has studied mammalian gametogenesis, fertilization, and pre-implantation embryonic
development with special emphasis on the gamete and zygotic ubiquitin-proteasome system
(UPS). He was the first to describe the role of UPS in the regulation of mitochondrial inheritance
and introduced a novel concept of extracellular UPS, which has been validated in reproduction
and outside the reproductive biology field. In particular, Peter demonstrated the importance of sperm borne pro-
teasomes for mammalian fertilization and the role of UPS in epididymal sperm quality control, a mechanism rel-
evant to male fertility evaluation in livestock, and the diagnosis and treatment of human male fertility. Peter’s
collaborative research on the biogenesis and post-fertilization processing of sperm head perinuclear theca influ-
enced the optimization and safeguarding of assisted reproductive technologies/therapies such as in vitro fertiliza-
tion and intracytoplasmic sperm injection. Other notable collaborations include the development of transgenic
pig model for the study of 26S proteasome and work on rodent model of human endometriosis. Recently, the
Sutovsky laboratory has also been focusing on biomarker-based flow cytometric semen analysis and semen
nanopurification aimed at improving conception rates in livestock artificial insemination. As of August 2017,
Peter published 170 peer reviewed articles and monograph chapters; he has also edited two books and three jour-
nal special issues. He holds 14 US and foreign patents, reflecting his involvement in technology development
and commercialization.
Tiziana A. L. Brevini
Tiziana A. L Brevini graduated in 1989. She spent three years at the Department of Molecular
Embryology, Cambridge (United Kingdom). She obtained a PhD in 1994 and then carried out
research programs at Monash University, Melbourne, at the University of Adelaide, Australia,
and at the University of Miami, United States. She presently serves as full professor of anatomy
and embryology at the University of Milan, Italy. She is director of the Diabetes Research
Institute–UniMi and Chair of the COST Action “CellFit—In vitro 3D total cell guidance and fit-
ness.” Brevini is author of more than 300 publications. Her main area of research focuses on the
understanding of cell differentiation and commitment, epigenetic control of cell fate, and pluripotency-related
networks in mammalian somatic cells and embryos. She is married and has one daughter. She is a keen skier, a
qualified sailor, and has a passion for navigation and meteorology.
Ramiro Alberio
Ramiro Alberio is an associate professor in developmental epigenetics at the School of
Biosciences, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom. He graduated as a veterinarian from La
Plata University (Argentina) and gained his PhD in Germany under the supervision of Eckhard
Wolf (University of Munich). He did his first postdoctoral training with Keith Campbell
(University of Nottingham, United Kingdom). Currently, his laboratory is interested in under-
standing how uncommitted cells in the early embryo respond to inducing signals and segregate
into the different cell lineages that make up a fetus. His laboratory has studied the gene networks
that determine the emergence of pluripotent cells during the formation of the bilaminar embryonic disc in large
mammals and established the cross-talk between embryonic and extraembryonic lineages during the preimplan-
tation period. He uses a combination of classical embryology and single cell transcriptomics to gain insight into
cell fate decisions in early embryogenesis. His laboratory has also contributed to elucidating the transcriptional
46 44th Annual Conference
and epigenetic program of primordial germ cells, the precursors of sperm and egg, in humans and pigs, demon-
strating conserved developmental mechanisms.
John Roche
John Roche is principal scientist for animal science at DairyNZ and managing director and prin-
cipal consultant for Down to Earth Advice Ltd. He has also held science appointments with the
National Centre for Dairy Production Research at Moorepark in Ireland, the Department of
Primary Industries in Australia, and the University of Tasmania. Roche leads a team of 12 scien-
tists, developers, and post-graduate students and has published approximately 150 peer-reviewed
science journal articles and book chapters. He is a regular contributor at international science and
farming conferences and has been a section editor for Journal of Dairy Science since 2012.
Roche is one of the most recognized authorities on the nutrition of grazing dairy cows, with a keen focus on prof-
itability. During the last two decades, his animal science programme has focused primarily on transition cow
nutrition and the role of body condition score and energy balance in milk production, health, and reproduction.
His review “Body condition score and its association with dairy cow productivity, health, and welfare” was the
most cited article in the Physiology and Management section of Journal of Dairy Science in 2010–2011. Roche
has also been involved in numerous genotype × diet comparison studies, identifying physiological reasons for
differences in body condition score change and reproductive efficiency in different genetic strains of Holstein-
Friesian cows. His research work in intake regulation identified diurnal patterns in the endocrine profiles of graz-
ing dairy cows that explain observed behavioral responses to feeding. Roche also has extensive publications in
grazing management, with a particular focus on the responsiveness of temperate grasses to carbon depletion, and
is well known for his expertise in grazing farm systems, having published some of the seminal applied studies in
stocking rate and farm system profitability.
David Kenny
David Kenny is a principal research scientist in Ruminant Nutritional Physiology with Teagasc in
Ireland and holds an adjunct professorship at University College Dublin. He has 20 years of
research experience in the biological control of a range of traits that are economically important
to ruminant livestock production systems. His work is based on in-depth study and the applica-
tion of state-of-the-art physiological and molecular approaches to these complex, multidimen-
sional traits. He has led a number of large multipartner research projects and has supervised the
studies of 15 PhD and nine MSc students to completion as principal supervisor. His research has
resulted in the publication of 130 full-length internationally peer-reviewed scientific articles to date as well as
many industry-targeted technical reports. He is currently leading a large Science Foundation Ireland research
project examining the molecular physiology of puberty and semen quality of bulls.
Platinum Level
Silver Level