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

bp0006rdr24 | Fetal-maternal Interactions | REDR2006

Fetal-maternal interactions during the establishment of pregnancy in ruminants

Spencer TE , Johnson GA , Bazeru FW , Burghardt RC

This review integrates established information with new insights into molecular and physiological mechanisms responsible for events leading to pregnancy recognition, endometrial receptivity, and implantation with emphasis on sheep. After formation of the corpus luteum, progesterone acts on the endometrium and stimulates blastocyst growth and elongation to form a filamentous conceptus (embryo/fetus and associated extraembryonic membranes). Recurrent early pregnancy loss in the ...

bp0007rdr32 | Unique Aspects of Reproduction in Diverse Ruminant Species | REDR2010

Enhancing reproductive performance in domestic dairy water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis)

Zicarelli L

The purpose of the review is to describe the factors that affect fertility in domestic water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) and the techniques that enable an improvement in reproductive performance. On Italian and Latin American farms where natural mating is practiced and bulls are always present in the herd, the inter-calving interval is approximately 400 days and the culling rate is lower than 15%. The buffalo has a tendency for seasonal reproductive acti...

bp0018cpr16 | Maturation of The Pre-ovulatory Follicle | CPR2009

Intra-follicular regulatory mechanisms in the porcine ovary

Hunter TM.G. , Paradis F.

The mechanisms controlling the follicular growth continuum in the pig involve the interaction between local growth factors which are expressed throughout development and extra-follicular factors such as gonadotrophins. A large number of follicular growth factors, many belonging to the transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) superfamily, have been identified in the somatic cells and in the oocyte. The relative importance of these intra-follicular factors varies wit...

bp0002rdr14 | Regulation of Folliculogenesis | REDR1990

Gonadotrophic control of follicle growth in the ewe

McNeilly AS , Picton HM , Campbell BK , Baird DT

Summary. Preovulatory follicle growth in the ewe is dependent on FSH although no precise relationship appears to exist between plasma concentrations of FSH and the number of preovulatory follicles which develop or ovulation rate. This may be related to a hitherto unrecognized influence of pulsatile LH on the growth of large follicles. Preovulatory follicle growth is dependent on the presence of basal amounts of LH, but pulsatile LH, while being essential to su...

bp0019cpr17 | Gestation Elicited | CPR2013

Application of RNA-seq transcriptomic analysis to reproductive physiology of the pig: Insights into differential trophoblast function within the late gestation porcine placenta

McNeel Anthony K. , Chen Celine , Schroeder Steven , Sonstegard Tad , Dawson Harry , Vallet Jeffrey L.

Next generation DNA sequencing is a high throughput method of sequencing DNA samples in parallel. During the last 10 years, this technology has expanded to include sequencing and quantification of an entire transcriptome. The advantage of this method of transcriptome analysis is that it allows the investigator to detect previously unknown genes and splice variants as well as detect potential DNA polymorphisms. Application of this technology, especially when used to perfo...

bp0018cpr14 | Maturation of The Pre-ovulatory Follicle | CPR2009

Nutritional and lactational effects on follicular development in the pig

Quesnel H.

In sows, follicular development is inhibited during lactation, and weaning the piglets allows recruitment and selection of follicles that will undergo preovulatory maturation and ovulate. Lactation inhibits GnRH secretion, and in turn LH secretion, through neuroendocrine stimuli induced by suckling. Pituitary response to GnRH and the sensitivity of the hypothalamo-pituitary unit to oestradiol positive feedback are also reduced. The impact of lactation on the reproductive...

bp0012cpr17 | Programmes for Controlled Reproduction | CPR1985

Control of time of parturitionin pigs

Guthrie H. D. ,

Summary. Injection of prostaglandin (PG) F-2ct or its analogues has provided a . technique to induce parturition after Day 110 of gestation in the sow. The mean interval from PG injection to parturition ranges from 24 to 28 h, but only 50-60% of the sows farrow during an 8-10 h working day, and as many as 20% of sows may begin parturition before the injection of PG or > 22 h after the injection. The duration of parturition is positively associated with...

bp0011editorial | (1) | CPR1982

Editorial: Control of Pig Reproduction

Cheryl J Ashworth

Almost 40 years ago, in 1981, the University of Nottingham Faculty of Agricultural Science hosted their 34th Easter School, which in that year was on the topic of control of pig reproduction. The proceedings of that meeting were published as Control of Pig Reproduction by Butterworths, London in 1982. The success of the conference, coupled with the favourable reviews of the published proceedings, highlighted the value of an international conference which brought together exper...

bp0012editorial | (1) | CPR1985

Editorial: Control of Pig Reproduction

Cheryl J Ashworth

Almost 40 years ago, in 1981, the University of Nottingham Faculty of Agricultural Science hosted their 34th Easter School, which in that year was on the topic of control of pig reproduction. The proceedings of that meeting were published as Control of Pig Reproduction by Butterworths, London in 1982. The success of the conference, coupled with the favourable reviews of the published proceedings, highlighted the value of an international conference which brought together exper...

bp0013editorial | (1) | CPR1989

Editorial: Control of Pig Reproduction

Cheryl J Ashworth

Almost 40 years ago, in 1981, the University of Nottingham Faculty of Agricultural Science hosted their 34th Easter School, which in that year was on the topic of control of pig reproduction. The proceedings of that meeting were published as Control of Pig Reproduction by Butterworths, London in 1982. The success of the conference, coupled with the favourable reviews of the published proceedings, highlighted the value of an international conference which brought together exper...