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

bp0005rdr29 | Nutrition-Reproduction Interactions | REDR2002

Fertility in male sheep: modulators of the acute effects of nutrition on the reproductive axis of male sheep

Blache D , Zhang S , Martin GB

Animals adjust the time of year that they reproduce through their ability to perceive and respond to critical aspects of their environment, such as photoperiod, nutrition or the socio–sexual milieu, and their genotype determines the degree of response to each stimulus. Ultimately, information from environmental cues filters through to the GnRH neurones in the brain which are the primary regulator of fertility. Each of these cues has been studied in isolation and the mech...

bp0014cpr2 | Regulation of Oocyte and Embryonic Development in Pigs | CPR1993

Nuclear control of early embryonic development in domestic pigs

Prather R. S. ,

In mammals, growing oocytes have characteristically high levels of RNA synthesis. After the initiation of meiosis, that is germinal vesicle breakdown, this RNA synthesis ceases. Although there is limited evidence for RNA synthesis by the zygote, significant amounts of RNA synthesis do not occur until a species-specific cell stage. In pigs, significant amounts of mRNA synthesis cannot be detected before the four-cell stage. There appear to be three qualitatively different ...

bp0005rdr3 | Overview of Ruminant Reproduction Problems | REDR2002

Enhancing reproductive performance in dairy buffalo: major constraints and achievements

Nanda AS , Brar PS , Prabhakar S

Buffalo are of high economic importance for farmers in several developing countries but reproductive performance is poor. A large proportion of heifers attain puberty at 3–5 years of age. A good quality diet supplemented with extra nutrients reduces the age of puberty whereas the effects of administration of exogenous GnRH or equine chorionic gonadotrophin (eCG) are equivocal. The incidence of anoestrus in buffalo ranges from 20 to 80% depending on season. Most buffal...

bp0014cpr19 | Components of Prolificacy in Pigs | CPR1993

Earlyembryonic development in prolific Meishan pigs

Ford S. P. , Youngs C. R. ,

Prenatal mortality in European pigs is estimated at 30-40%, the majority of which occurs between days 12 and 18 after mating. Chinese Meishan pigs are prolific, averaging three to five more pigs per litter than do European breeds. Early reports into the fecundity of Meishan females suggested that their prolificacy resulted from lower embryonic mortality when compared with European females exhibiting the same ovulation rate. The preponderance of evidence suggests that ther...

bp0014cpr9 | Ovarian and Uterine Function | CPR1993

Sources and biological actions of relaxin in pigs

Bagnell C. A. , Zhang Q. , Downey B. , Ainsworth L.

Although the major source of relaxin in pigs is the corpus luteum of pregnancy, there is now evidence for relaxin gene expression and translation into protein in the theca intema cells of the preovulatory follicle, the corpus luteum of the cycle and the uterus. The theca interna cells retain their ability to express the relaxin gene and protein following ovulation. During the early stages of development of the corpus luteum, the theca-derived small lutein cells are the so...

bp0003rdr36 | Environmental and Metabolic Interactions | REDR1994

Physiological effects of undernutrition on postpartum anoestrus in cows

Jolly PD , McDougall S , Fitzpatrick LA , Macmillan KL , Entwistle KW

The focus of this review is the physiological effects of undemutrition on ovarian follicle growth and the occurrence of ovulation in postpartum cows. Evidence suggests that moderate levels of underfeeding, before or after calving, may interfere with the mechanism(s) of final follicle maturation and ovulation, whereas more pronounced nutritional deficiencies may affect the mechanism(s) regulating dominant follicle size and the dynamics of dominant follicle growth and regression...

bp0005rdr24 | Genes Controlling Reproductive Performance | REDR2002

The role of bone morphogenetic proteins in ovarian function

Shimasaki S , Moore RK , Erickson GF , Otsuka F

Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) represent the largest subclass of growth factors in the transforming growth factor ß (TGF-ß) superfamily. BMPs have proven to be multifunctional regulators of a wide variety of biological processes in numerous types of cell and tissue. The role of inhibins, activins and TGF-ßs (which also belong to the TGF-ß superfamily) in reproduction has been studied extensively over the last 15 years. However, there were no reports on ...

bp0013cpr11 | Ovarian Function | CPR1989

Local regulatory factors controlling folliculogenesis in pigs

Tonetta S. A. , diZerega S. A. ,

Keywords: folliculogenesis; int raova rian control; pig© 1990 Journals of Reproduction & Fertility Ltd...

bp0019cpr3 | Gametes and Embryos | CPR2013

Boar seminal plasma proteins and their relevance to reproductive technologies

W.L. Flowers1, K.R. Stewart1, T. Gall2, S. Novak3, M.K. Dyck3 , and R.N. Kirkwood4 , Nagase H , Woolley DE

Seminal plasma proteins participate in a number of events important for fertilization and the establishment of pregnancy. As a result, attempts have been made to use them to enhance reproductive performance associated with several swine reproductive technologies. Inclusion of seminal plasma into cryopreservation and sex-sorting protocols improved sperm viability and membrane integrity and suppressed capacitation-like changes which are considered to be major challenges as...