Searchable, peer-reviewed, open-access proceedings from bioscience and biomedical conferences

bp0017cpr12 | (1) | CPR2005

The use of microarrays to define functionally-related genes that are differentially expressed in the cycling pig uterus

Green J.A. , Kim J.G. , Whitworth J.G. , Agca C. , Prather R.S.

In swine and other livestock, the uterine endometrium exhibits dramatic morphological and secretory changes throughout the oestrous cycle and during pregnancy. Such physiological changes are a reflection of extremely complex interactions between gene products (RNA and protein). The recent development of genomics and proteomics methods, as well as associated bioinformatics tools, has provided the means to begin characterising such interactions. Indeed, the analysis of the...

bp0005rdr30 | Nutrition-Reproduction Interactions | REDR2002

Interactions between nutrition and ovarian activity in cattle: physiological, cellular and molecular mechanisms

Armstrong DC , Gong JG , Webb JG

The effects of acute changes in dietary intake on ovarian activity can be correlated with changes in circulating concentrations of metabolic hormones including insulin, insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), growth hormone and leptin. There is no corresponding change in circulating gonadotrophin concentrations and it is proposed that the dietary induced changes in ovarian activity, resulting from acute changes in dietary intake, are a result of direct actions of these metabolic...

bp0006rdr11 | The Eric Lamming Memorial Session | REDR2006

Metabolism of the bovine cumulus-oocyte complex and influence on subsequent developmental competence

Thompson JG , Lane M , Gilchrist RB

The two types of cells that make up the cumulus-oocyte complex (i.e. the oocyte and cumulus cells) have very different metabolic demands, with glucose occupying a central role in metabolic activity. Cumulus cells have a significant requirement for and utilise high levels of glucose, yet appear to have little need for oxidative metabolism. In contrast, oocytes have a requirement for oxidative metabolism, although limited glucose metabolism may also be an important aspect of mei...

bp0008rdr9 | Neuroendocrinology | REDR2014

Wild ungulate vontraception: Use of GnRH agonist or GnRH vaccine to control reproduction in captive and free-ranging female elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni)

Powers JG , Baker DL , Nett TM

Summary. Limiting the abundance of free-ranging ungulate populations is a significant issue for natural resource managers in many areas of North America. Hunting and culling have traditionally been used to regulate wild animal numbers but there are a growing number of circumstances where these methods pose significant legal, ethical, and ecological challenges, and resource managers often seek alternative approaches to population control. Decreasing fertility o...

bp0004rdr3 | Follicular Development | REDR1998

Molecular mechanisms regulating follicular recruitment and selection

Webb R , Campbell BK , Garverick HA , Gong JG , Gutierrez CG , Armstrong DG

Ovarian follicular growth and development is an integrated process encompassing both extraovarian signals, such as gonadotrophins and metabolic hormones, and intraovarian factors. Follicular development has been classified into gonadotrophin-independent and -dependent phases. In the latter, FSH provides the primary drive for follicular recruitment and LH is required for continued development of follicles to the preovulatory stage. A transient increase in circulating FSH preced...

bp0004rdr22 | Embryonic Survival | REDR1998

Uterine differentiation as a foundation for subsequent fertility

Bartol FF , Wiley AA , Floyd JG , Ott TL , Bazer FW , Gray CA , Spencer TE

Uterine differentiation in cattle and sheep begins prenatally, but is completed postnatally. Mechanisms regulating this process are not well defined. However, studies of urogenital tract development in murine systems, particularly those involving tissue recombination and targeted gene mutation, indicate that the ideal uterine organizational programme evolves epigenetically through dynamic cell–cell and cell–matrix interactions that define the microenvironmental conte...

bp0005rdr7 | Gamete-Somatic Cell Interactions | REDR2002

Mechanisms regulating follicular development and selection of the dominant follicle

Webb R , Nicholas B , Gong JG , Campbell BK , Gutierrez CG , Garverick HA , Armstrong DG

Reproductive function is an integrated process encompassing both extraovarian signals, such as gonadotrophins, and intrafollicular factors, such as locally produced growth factors. Initiation of primordial follicle growth and the early stages of folliculogenesis can occur without gonadotrophins. However, in vivo and in vitro studies indicate that FSH may stimulate the rate of preantral follicle growth and that it can take only 3 months for a primordial follic...

bp0007rdr2 | Ruminant Genomes | REDR2010

Genomic tools for characterizing monogenic and polygenic traits in ruminants - using the bovine as an example

Taylor JF , Chapple RH , Decker JE , Gregg SJ , Kim JW , McKay SD , Ramey HR , Rolf MM , Taxis TM , Schnabel RD

Next generation sequencing platforms have democratized genome sequencing. Large genome centers are no longer required to produce genome sequences costing millions. A few lanes of paired-end sequence on an lllumina Genome Analyzer, costing <$10,000, will produce more sequence than generated only a few years ago to produce the human and cow assemblies. The de novo assembly of large numbers of short reads into a high-quality whole-genome sequence is now technical...

bp0019cpr16 | Pregnancy, Parturition and The Neonate | CPR2013

Roles of selected nutrients in development of the porcine conceptus during pregnancy

Fuller W. Bazer Fuller W. , Jinyoung Kim Jinyoung , Gwonhwa Song Gwonhwa , Hakhyun Ka Hakhyun , Guoyao Wu Guoyao , Johnson Gregory A. , Vallet Jeffrey L.

Conceptus development in mammals depends on an intra-uterine environment filled with histotroph that includes molecules that are secreted by uterine epithelia and/or selectively transported into the uterine lumen. In pigs, total recoverable glucose, fructose, arginine, leucine and glutamine increase in histotroph with advancing days of the peri-implantation period of pregnancy and in allantoic fluid later in gestation. During pregnancy, the uterine luminal epithelium (LE...