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

bp0003rdr5 | Maternal-Embryo Interactions | REDR1994

The oxytocin receptor, luteolysis and the maintenance of pregnancy

Wathes DC , Lamming GE

During luteal regression episodic pulses of oxytocin secretion become coupled to the release of prostaglandin F2α (PGF2α) following synthesis of endometrial oxytocin receptors, but in early pregnancy the inhibition of oxytocin receptor formation by the conceptus prevents the development of the pulsatile pattern of PGF2α release needed to achieve luteolysis. Oxytocin receptors are present on the luminal epithelium in ovariectomize...

bp0004rdr24 | Embryonic Survival | REDR1998

The regulation of interferon-τ production and uterine hormone receptors during early pregnancy

Mann GE , Lamming GE , Robinson RS , Wathes DC

During early pregnancy the bovine embryo must produce a protein called interferon τ which inhibits the development of the luteolytic mechanism. Failure to inhibit luteolysis is the major cause of pregnancy loss in cows. The embryo must produce sufficient quantities of interferon τ by about day 16 to prevent luteolysis. Its ability to achieve this is largely dependent on the pattern of maternal progesterone production. A late rise in progesterone after ovulation or po...

bp0005rdr17 | Ovary-Uterus-Embryo Interactions | REDR2002

Follicle growth, corpus luteum function and their effects on embryo development in postpartum dairy cows

Wathes DC , Taylor VJ , Cheng Z , Mann GE

Absent or irregular ovarian cycles in lactating dairy cows are caused by failure to ovulate the dominant follicle at the appropriate time. The follicle then either regresses or develops into a cyst. This process can be triggered by a variety of metabolic and disease factors that act at the hypothalamus and pituitary gland to inhibit pulsatile LH secretion and the LH surge, and at the ovary to reduce follicular growth and oestradiol production. Cows of poor energy status have l...

bp0001redr15 | (1) | REDR1980

Endocrine patterns of the post-partum cow

Lamming GE , Claire Wathes D , Peters AR

Summary. Milked dairy cows generally have a shorter post-partum interval to ovarian cyclicity than suckling dairy or beef cows. In milked and suckling cows, there is a strong seasonal influence with spring-calving cows remaining anoestrous longer. Increasing the suckling intensity further delays the onset of ovarian cyclicity, probably by increasing the frequency or strength of its inhibitory influence on hypothalamic activity. Plasma FSH levels rise in most c...

bp0003rdr11 | Development of the Reproductive Axis | REDR1994

Melatonin and the development of circadian and seasonal rhythmicity

McMillen IC , Houghton DC , Young IR

We have investigated whether the maternal melatonin rhythm provides the fetus with either a circadian or seasonal ‘signal’ during development. Our findings provide evidence that melatonin can generate and entrain the early evening peak in the daily rhythm of fetal breathing movements. In contrast, daily variations in maternal and fetal prolactin concentrations are present in pinealectomized ewes, are altered by changes in the time of onset of darkness, but are unal...

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...