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...

bp0010ised14 | (1) | ISED2019

Delayed implantation combined with precocious sexual maturation in female offspring: a story of the stoat

Amstislavsky S , Brusentsev E , Kizilova E

The objective of this study was to investigate the precocious sexual maturation in stoat females. We confirmed oestrus and successful mating in newborn stoats; and documented ovulation, preimplantation embryo development, embryonic diapause and implantation during first nine months of life. A total of 100 embryos at different stages of development were flushed from the oviducts and uterine horns obtained from female stoats (Mustela erminea) between day 26 and day 251 ...

bp0013cpr13 | Ovarian Function | CPR1989

Uterine and ovarian countercurrentpathways in the control of ovarian function in the pig

Krzymowski T. , Kotwica J. , Stefanczyk-Krzymowska S.

Keywords: counter current transfer; ovary; oviduct; uterus; pig© 1990 Journals of Reproduction & Fertility Ltd...

bp0013cpr16 | Gamete Physiology | CPR1989

Cloning of embryos

Prather R. S. , First N. L. ,

Summary. Nuclear transfer for the study of differentiation in amphibians has been used since the 1950s, but not until recently have the same procedures been applied successfully to some mammals. Nuclear transfer, as developed for the amphibian, is successful in sheep, cattle, rabbit, and pig, but not mouse embryos. This fact is discussed in relation to the species-specific timing of the activation of the zygotic genome. Nuclear transfer to an oocyte presu...

bp0014cpr17 | Components of Prolificacy in Pigs | CPR1993

Genetic basis of prolificacy in Meishan pigs

Haley C. S. , Leel G. J.

Research in France and in the UK confirms the prolificacy of the Chinese Meishan breed to be about three to four piglets greater than that of control Large White females. Crossbreeding studies clearly indicate that this breed difference is due to genes acting in the dam and not in the litter itself. There is high heterosis for litter size in F1 Meishan x Large White crossbred females, such that their litter size is similar to or greater than that of purebred Me...

bp0016cpr16 | Gestation and Parturition | CPR2001

Comparative aspects of placental efficiency

Wilson M. E. , Ford S. P.

Litter size is often proposed as the trait that could have the greatest impact in improving reproductive efficiency of pigs. Efforts to select directly for increased litter size have generally been unsuccessful and highly variable. As a result, several attempts have been made to identify critical physiological components that control litter size, with the underlying assumption that augmenting these components would improve this important trait. One attempt at improving p...

bp0017cpr17 | (1) | CPR2005

Influence of semen on inflammatory modulators of embryo implantation

Robertson S.A. , O'Leary S. , Armstrong D.T.

Insemination transmits to the female reproductive tract constituents of seminal plasma that target uterine epithelial cells to activate a cascade of inflammatory and immunological changes. Experiments in rodents show seminal factor signalling acts to 'condition' the female immune response to tolerate the conceptus, and to organise molecular and cellular changes in the endometrium to facilitate embryo development and implantation. The active factors in seminal plasma are ...

bp0007rdr3 | Ruminant Genomes | REDR2010

Creating new knowledge for ruminant reproduction from rapidly expanding and evolving scientific databases

Bauersachs S , Blum H , Krebs S , FröhIich T , Arnold GJ , Wolf E

Declining fertility is a major problem for the dairy industry. Recent developments of Omics-technologies facilitate a comprehensive analysis of molecular patters in gametes, embryos and tissues of the reproductive tract which may help to identify the reasons for impaired fertility. Large Omics-datasets require appropriate bioinformatics analysis in the context of rapidly expanding and evolving scientific databases. This overview summarizes the current status of ruminant genome...

bp0001redr10 | (1) | REDR1980

Endocrine patterns associated with puberty in male and female cattle

Schams D , Schallenberger E , Gombe S , Karg H

Summary. In four studies secretion patterns of LH, FSH, prolactin, testosterone and progesterone were measured in male and female cattle to determine endocrine changes associated with sexual maturation. Two periods of increasing gonadotrophin secretion were observed, the second one coinciding with puberty. A short luteal phase of 8–12 days precedes the first oestrus at 10–11 or 14 months of age. The testosterone values of the bulls increased with age...