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Vitrification of Lepidopteran Embryos-A Simple Protocol to Cryopreserve the Embryos of the Sunflower Moth,

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Journal Insects
Specialty Biology
Date 2022 Oct 27
PMID 36292907
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Abstract

Embryos of the sunflower moth, (Hulst), were cryopreserved after modification to the method that was previously described for . The workflow to develop the protocol consisted of methods to weaken the embryonic chorion followed by the application of various methods to disrupt the sub-chorionic wax layer. These steps were necessary to render the embryos permeable to water and cryoprotectants. Initially, the embryos were incubated at 21° and 24 °C, and the development of the double pigment spots/eyespot and eclosion were tracked every two hours. The embryos at 24 °C showed eyespots as early as 30 h, while in the case of the embryos that were incubated at 21 °C, there was a developmental delay of approximately 20 h. The embryos at 24 °C showed peak eclosion between 55 and 70 h, and the embryos at 21 °C eclosed between 80 and 100 h of development. Estimating this range is crucial for the purposes of stage selection and treatment initiation for cryopreservation protocol development for the embryos. The control hatch percentage at either developmental temperature was >90%, and the sodium hypochloride, 2-propanol and alkane-based treatments reduced the embryo hatchability to <10%. Hence, a modified surfactant-hypochlorite mixture-was used to destabilize the chorion and solubilize the hydrophobic lipid layers. Water permeability assessments using the dye-uptake method show that polysorbate 80 in combination with sodium hypochlorite alone is capable of permeabilizing the embryo as efficiently as sequential hypochlorite-alkane treatments, but with significantly higher hatch rates. A vitrification medium consisting of ethane diol and trehalose was used to dehydrate and load the embryos with the cryoprotective agent. The median hatch rates after vitrification were 10%, and maximum was 23%.

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