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

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...

bp0003rdr24 | Regulation of Gonadal Function | REDR1994

Investigating local regulation of the testes of ruminants

Maddocks S , Kern S , Setchell BP

In addition to endocrine regulation by the gonadotrophic hormones, the functions of the testes are regulated locally by paracrine and autocrine factors. Some attempts have been made to isolate cells from the testes of immature bulls and rams for investigation of cell function in vitro. However, most studies have used in vitro cultures of cells isolated from the testes of rats and a large variety of factors have been identified as potential local regulators. T...

bp0012cpr6 | Development of The Embryo and its Role in Pregnancy | CPR1985

Effects of the ovary and conceptus on uterine blood flow in the pig

Ford S. P. , Stice S. L. ,

Summary. Changes in uterine blood flow throughout pregnancy appear to be due to steroid-induced alterations in uterine arterial tone and contractility. Arterial contractility is a transient reduction in luminal diameter in response to nerve stimulation or to an alpha-1 adrenergic agonist, leading to short-term reduction in uterine blood flow. Tone is the pressure exerted by an arterial segment against an intraluminal flow (distensibility) and is considere...

bp0010ised10 | (1) | ISED2019

Transcriptome analysis of blastocysts acquiring implantation competency in mice

Kong S , Wang H

Blastocyst activation, referring to the blastocyst acquiring the implantation competency, is the determining factor for implantation into the receptive uterus. It involves the process of embryonic cell differentiation to contact and initiate dialog with the uterine cells. Before the application of -omics approaches to this biological event, only the cellular morphological changes and a small number of molecules were known to regulate this process. This review aims to discuss t...

bp0014cpr16 | Reproductive Management | CPR1993

Effects of nutrition on pregnant and lactating sows

Einarsson S. , Rojkittikhun T. ,

It has been suggested that the long-term reproduction of the sow is best served by minimizing weight and fat loss in lactation. Such a strategy would require only a minimal restoration of weight in the following pregnancy, which would be beneficial, since the greater feed intake and weight gain in pregnancy, the greater the weight loss in lactation. Feeding ad libitum should be practised during lactation while gestation feed intake must be held low. A relationship between...

bp0016cpr8 | OOcyte Development in vitro and in vivo | CPR2001

Basicmechanismsof fertilization and parthenogenesisin pigs

Prather R. S.

Fertilization of the egg, or oocyte, initiates the entire developmental process, but while the mechanism by which the spermatozoa triggers the oocyte to resume meiosis has been studied extensively, conclusions about this process are still elusive. Some workers have suggested that a molecule on the surface of the spermatozoon may interact with a receptor on the plasma membrane of the oocyte, thereby triggering the oocyte to resume meiosis. Other workers have focused on a ...

bp0001redr9 | (1) | REDR1980

Basic neuroendocrine events before puberty in cattle, sheep and pigs

Pelletier J , Carrez-Camous S , Thiery JC

Summary. Neuroendocrine events before puberty are compared in male and female cattle, sheep and pigs. The patterns of secretion of gonadotrophin, the age-related LH responses to castration or LH-RH administration and the effects of prolonged steroid treatment give information about the maturity of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis. It appears that in all three species the mechanisms involved in the expression of puberty are progressive rather than abrupt events....

bp0001redr20 | (1) | REDR1980

Control and induction of ovulation in cattle

Roche JF , Ireland J , Mawhinney S

Summary. The control and induction of ovulation in cattle are discussed with particular reference to use of progesterone-impregnated coils in heifers and beef cows. Progesterone treatment for 14 days was required to obtain precise onset of oestrus. With 7, 9 or 12 days of progesterone treatment a luteolytic agent in the form of a prostaglandin (PG) or oestradiol benzoate had to be used. Fertility was normal after treatment durations of 7, 9 or 12 days, but fer...

bp0004rdr34 | Reproductive Technology | REDR1998

Activation of primordial follicles in vitro

Fortune JE , Kito S , Byrd DD

The resting pool of primordial follicles in mammalian ovaries is a potential resource for the genetic manipulation of domestic animals, the preservation of endangered species, and the amelioration of some forms of infertility in humans. Exploitation of this large reservoir of follicles depends on the development of methods for activating primordial follicles to begin growth in vitro and of methods for sustaining follicular growth to the stage at which oocytes are capa...

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...