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

bp0004rdr30 | Nutrition and Metabolic Signalling | REDR1998

Nutrition and fetal growth: paradoxical effects in the overnourished adolescent sheep

Wallace JM , Bourke DA , Aitken RP

Inappropriate maternal nutrient intake at key developmental timepoints during ovine pregnancy has a profound influence on the outcome of pregnancy and aspects of postnatal productivity. However, the responses to alterations in maternal nutrition in adult sheep are often highly variable and inconsistent between studies. The growing adolescent sheep provides a new, robust and nutritionally sensitive paradigm with which to study the causes, consequences and reversibility of prena...

bp0004rdr35 | Reproductive Technology | REDR1998

Aspects of follicular and oocyte maturation that affect the developmental potential of embryos

Mermillod P , Oussaid B , Cognié Y

The ability to mature, be fertilized and finally to develop into a viable embryo is acquired gradually by the oocyte during progressive differentiation throughout folliculogenesis. This process starts with oocyte growth during the first steps of follicular development. As the oocyte is close to its final size, other modifications occur, less spectacular but at least as important in determining the resulting ability of the oocyte to accomplish its reproductive purpose (developm...

bp0005rdr11 | Reproductive Technology | REDR2002

Cloning in livestock agriculture

Wells DN

A tremendous amount is required of the oocyte cytoplasm to reprogramme a differentiated donor nucleus after somatic cell nuclear transfer so that it re-acquires a state of totipotency and can form a cloned individual. These reprogramming events must occur in a relatively short period after embryo reconstruction, quite unlike the situation during gametogenesis. It is remarkable that nuclear transfer can produce physiologically normal animals, but the process is highly prone to ...

bp0005rdr13 | Pre-natal Programming of Lifetime Productivity and Health | REDR2002

Consequences of manipulating gametes and embryos of ruminant species

McEvoy TG , Ashworth CJ , Rooke JA , Sinclair KD

During the past 12 years, ruminants have provided a focus for some significant advances in mammalian reproductive biotechnologies. Lambs were the first offspring generated after nuclear transfer of fetal or adult cells to enucleated oocytes, and many calves of pre-determined gender are today the result of commercialized semen sexing. In 1990, the birth of one calf provided living proof that even 'dead' spermatozoa can be paternal, whereas, more recently, a short-lived ...

bp0005rdr15 | Pre-natal Programming of Lifetime Productivity and Health | REDR2002

Consequences of intra-uterine growth retardation for postnatal growth, metabolism and pathophysiology

Greenwood PL , Bell AW

Intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR), caused by maternal undernutrition or placental insufficiency, is usually associated with disproportionately large reductions in the growth of some fetal organs and tissues (thymus, liver, spleen, thyroid) and impaired cellular development of other tissues (small intestine, secondary wool follicles, skeletal muscle). Growth of other tissues, most notably brain, is relatively unimpaired. In our recent study of postnatal consequences of IU...

bp0006rdr5 | Ovarian Function | REDR2006

Control of ovarian follicular and corpus luteum development for the synchronization of ovulation in cattle

Thatcher WW , Sanlos JEP

The objective of this review is to integrate strategies to optimize an ovulatory control program which then serves as a platform to improve the reproductive performance of lactating dairy cows. Programmed management of follicle growth, regression of the CL and induction of ovulation led to development of the Ovsynch program. Pre-synchronization of estrous cycles followed 12 to 14 days later with the Ovsynch program increased pregnancy rates to timed inseminations. Initiation o...

bp0007rdr30 | Managing Fertility in Domestic Ruminants | REDR2010

Causes and consequences of the variation in the number of ovarian follicles in cattle

Evans ACO , Mossa F , Fair T , Lonergan P , Butler ST , Zielak-Steciwko AE , Smith GW , Jimenez-Krassel F , Folger JK , Ireland JLH , Ireland JJ

Summary. In cattle we have noted that the antral follicle count (AFC, follicles ≥3 mm in diameter) varies greatly among animals (from 5 to 50), is repeatable within animals, and is highly correlated with the total number of healthy follicles in ovaries. Also, animals with low AFC have higher serum concentrations of FSH and LH, but lower concentrations of Anti-Mullerian Hormone, progesterone and androgens than animals with high AFC. We have investigated t...

bp0008rdr3 | Genomes, Proteomics, Metabolomics | REDR2014

Proteomics of bovine endometrium, oocytes and early embryos

Deutsch Daniela R , Fröhlich Thomas , Arnold Georg J

Summary. Embryo-maternal communication, as well as recognition and establishment of pregnancy, is predominantly controlled by secretion of hormones and proteins. Furthermore, uterine fluid serves as a histotroph and contains factors essential for embryo development and elongation, making it a meaningful source for proteomic approaches of early embryonic development. The studies included in this review address the analysis of uterine fluid and endometrium durin...

bp0010ised13 | (1) | ISED2019

Trophectoderm and embryoblast proliferate at slow pace in the course of embryonic diapause in the roe deer (Capreolus capreolus)

Rüegg AB , Bernal S , Moser FN , Rutzen I , Ulbrich SE

The European roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) was the first mammal in which embryonic diapause has been described. While diapause is characterized by a complete developmental arrest in some species, roe deer blastocysts show a very slow, yet continuous growth. To date, it is neither known whether this growth is accompanied by developmental progression nor whether it is uniform in both, the trophectoderm (TE) and the inner cell mass (ICM). We collected roe deer blastocysts during...

bp0012cpr2 | Endocrinology of Follicular Development | CPR1985

Maturation of ovarian follicles in the prepubertalgilt

Christenson R. K. , Ford J. J. , Redmer D. A.

Summary. The processes of follicle development and puberty are closely related, and both are associated with maturation of the hypothalamic—pituitary—ovarian axis. Prenatal development of the ovary is independent of gonadotrophic stimulation. Beyond 60 days of age (postnatally), tertiary follicles develop and gonadotrophins begin to influence ovarian follicular development. Negative feedback regulation of pituitary gonadotrophins by ovarian secretions dev...