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

bp0003rdr25 | Regulation of Gonadal Function | REDR1994

Growth factors and the control of folliculogenesis

Monget P , Monniaux D

There is increasing evidence that growth factors modulate folliculogenesis. However their precise role in the processes of follicular growth, differentiation and atresia is still unknown. Growth factors belong to complex systems, including all the factors structurally and functionally related, their receptor(s) and, in most cases, binding proteins or proteoglycans. In this review, the insulin-like growth factor (IGF) system is presented as a paradigm for the study of other gro...

bp0012cpr9 | Manipulation of The Embryo | CPR1985

Culture and storage of pig embryos

Davis D. L. ,

Summary. Studies have consistently demonstrated that 4-cell pig embryos can be cultured to the blastocyst stage in a simple salt solution containing bovine serum albumin (BSA). Pig embryos appear to be detrimentally affected by lower levels of lactate and pyruvate than are mouse embryos, but in general their in-vitro requirements are similar. Results from embryos cultured between the 4-cell and blastocyst stages are consistent enough to allow the use of c...

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...

bp0013cpr5 | Nutrition-Metabolism-Reproduction Interactions | CPR1989

Nutritional strategies to optimize reproductionin pigs

Cole D. J. A. ,

Keywords: pigs; nutrition; reproduction; condition; strategy© 1990 Journals of Reproduction & Fertility Ltd...

bp0003rdr12 | Development of the Reproductive Axis | REDR1994

Ontogeny of GnRH systems

Caldani1 M , Antoine M , Batailler M , Duittoz A

In all vertebrate species studied, the main central population of GnRH neurones, which produces the final messages regulating reproduction, originates outside the brain. Early during fetal life, they appear in the olfactory placode epithelium and then migrate toward the base of the telencephalon in close association with the nervus terminalis, penetrate the brain within the nervus terminalis roots, reach their final locations and eventually grow axons toward their targets. Onl...

bp0001redr8 | (1) | REDR1980

Endocrine mechanisms governing transition into adulthood in female sheep

Foster DL , Ryan Kathleen D

Summary. It is proposed that the first follicular phase in the lamb is initiated when responsiveness to oestradiol inhibition of LH secretion decreases sufficiently to permit the expression of an inherent hourly LH pulse rhythm. The hourly LH pulse rhythm is believed to drive oestradiol production to levels that induce the first LH surge. This hypothesis is based upon several considerations. First, pulsatile LH secretion invariably occurs at low frequencies in...

bp0009rdr7 | (1) | REDR1986

Heterogeneous cell types in the corpus luteum of sheep, goats and cattle

O'Shea J. D.

Summary. Data on the structure, quantitation, origins and functions of the large luteal (LL) and small luteal (SL) cells of sheep, goats and cattle are reviewed. Both LL and SL cells show ultrastructural features consistent with a steroidogenic function. However, in addition to differences in size and shape, LL cells differ from SL cells primarily in possessing large numbers of secretory granules, suggesting an additional protein/polypeptide synthetic and secr...

bp0003rdr4 | Maternal-Embryo Interactions | REDR1994

Cellular interactions during implantation in domestic ruminants

Guillomot M

Implantation is a critical step in the progress of pregnancy, during which the conceptus acquires a fixed position within the uterine lumen, and leads to the establishment of the placental structures. This process implies some cellular modifications of both the uterine epithelium and the trophoblast to ensure cell adhesion between the two tissues. In ruminants, the implantation process is characterized by three main steps: a long pre-attachment period lasting 2–3 weeks d...