The safety of assisted reproductive technology (ART) is of frequent concern. Unfortunately, animal models for studying the safety of intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) have limitations in mimicking human ICSI manipulations. As reported herein, we invented a modified holding pipette for mouse oocyte injection that resulted in the delivery of live pups. A modified holding pipette was prepared for mouse oocyte injection and was compared with the conventional pipette for human use and a trumpet-shaped pipette. After ICSI, the oocytes were cultured to cleavage embryos until fallopian transfer. The use of the trumpet-shaped holding pipette and the new modified holding pipette for mouse oocyte injection achieved comparable and satisfactory oocyte survival rates (83.44% and 85.71%, respectively) and embryo cleavage rates (41.98% and 42.42%, respectively), which were significantly higher than those obtained with the human egg-holding pipette (oocyte survival rate: 65.85%; embryo cleavage rate: 27.78%). After 13 embryos were transferred using each type of pipette, three live pups were produced with the new modified holding pipette, one was produced with the holding pipette for human use, and none were produced with the trumpet-shaped holding pipette. The modified holding pipette for oocyte injection is effective and very easy to prepare. Moreover, using this new method, we produced live pups, which will contribute to a useful animal model for safety studies of ICSI in the future.
Keywords: Holding pipette; Intracytoplasmic sperm injection; Oocyte survival rate.
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