Reproduction, fertility, and development.
Periodical
Reproductive Medicine
Embryonic Development
Fertility
Fetal Development
Reproduction
Publisher:
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation,
Frequency: Eight no. a year, 1996-
Country: Australia
Language: English
Author(s):
CSIRO (Australia), Fertility Society of Australia., Australian Academy of Science., Australian Society for Reproductive Biology., Society for Reproductive Biology.
Start Year:1989 -
ISSN:
1031-3613 (Print)
1031-3613 (Linking)
1031-3613 (Linking)
Impact Factor
1.9
| NLM ID: | 8907465 |
| (DNLM): | SR0065297(s) |
| (OCoLC): | 19505713 |
| Coden: | RFDEEH |
| Classification: | W1 RE213KK |
Lipids and calcium uptake of sperm in relation to cold shock and preservation: a review.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
January 1, 1993
Volume 5, Issue 6 639-658 doi: 10.1071/rd9930639
White IG.When sperm of the ram, bull, boar and stallion are cold-shocked by rapid cooling to near freezing point, motility and metabolic activity are irreversibly depressed and the acrosome and plasma membrane disrupted. Ram sperm become susceptible to cold shock in the proximal corpus region of the epididymis when the cytoplasmic droplet has moved backwards to the distal portion of the sperm midpiece. The membrane constituents phospholipids and cholesterol are important in cold shock which causes loss of lipid from sperm. The susceptibility of sperm to cold shock is linked with a high ratio of unsatur... Read More
60
Lipids and calcium uptake of sperm in relation to cold shock and preservation: a review.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
January 1, 1993
Volume 5, Issue 6 639-658 doi: 10.1071/rd9930639
White IG.When sperm of the ram, bull, boar and stallion are cold-shocked by rapid cooling to near freezing point, motility and metabolic activity are irreversibly depressed and the acrosome and plasma membrane disrupted. Ram sperm become susceptible to cold shock in the proximal corpus region of the epididymis when the cytoplasmic droplet has moved backwards to the distal portion of the sperm midpiece. The membrane constituents phospholipids and cholesterol are important in cold shock which causes loss of lipid from sperm. The susceptibility of sperm to cold shock is linked with a high ratio of unsatur... Read More
60
Effects of age on follicular fluid exosomal microRNAs and granulosa cell transforming growth factor-β signalling during follicle development in the mare.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
May 7, 2015
Volume 27, Issue 6 897-905 doi: 10.1071/RD14452
da Silveira JC, Winger QA, Bouma GJ, Carnevale EM.Age-related decline in fertility is a consequence of low oocyte number and/or low oocyte competence resulting in pregnancy failure. Transforming growth factor (TGF)-β signalling is a well-studied pathway involved in follicular development and ovulation. Recently, small non-coding RNAs, namely microRNAs (miRNAs), have been demonstrated to regulate several members of this pathway; miRNAs are secreted inside small cell-secreted vesicles called exosomes. The overall goal of the present study was to determine whether altered exosome miRNA content in follicular fluid from old mares is associated wi... Read More
38
Equine placentation.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
May 10, 2002
Volume 13, Issue 7-8 623-634 doi: 10.1071/rd01063
Allen WR, Stewart F.A tough, elastic glycoprotein capsule envelops the equine blastocyst between Days 6 and 23 after ovulation. It maintains the spherical configuration of, and provides physical support for, the embryo as it traverses the entire uterine lumen during Days 6-17, propelled by myometrial contractions that are stimulated by pulsatile release of prostaglandin F2alpha and prostaglandin E2. The capsule also accumulates constituents of the exocrine secretions of the endometrial glands ('uterine milk') as nutrients for the mobile embryo as it releases its antiluteolytic maternal recognition-of-pregnancy si... Read More
26
Obesity is associated with altered metabolic and reproductive activity in the mare: effects of metformin on insulin sensitivity and reproductive cyclicity.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
August 26, 2006
Volume 18, Issue 6 609-617 doi: 10.1071/rd06016
Vick MM, Sessions DR, Murphy BA, Kennedy EL, Reedy SE, Fitzgerald BP.In mares, obesity is associated with continuous reproductive activity during the non-breeding season. To investigate the effect of obesity and associated alterations in metabolic parameters on the oestrous cycle, two related studies were conducted. In Experiment 1, obese (body condition score > 7) mares were fed ad libitum or were moderately feed restricted during the late summer and autumn months. Feed restriction did not alter the proportion of mares entering seasonal anoestrus. However, obese mares exhibited a significantly longer duration of the oestrous cycle, significant increases in ... Read More
24
Not just a number: effect of age on fertility, pregnancy and offspring vigour in thoroughbred brood-mares.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
March 20, 2015
Volume 27, Issue 6 872-879 doi: 10.1071/RD14390
Scoggin CF.Advancing age can adversely affect a thoroughbred brood-mare's reproductive efficiency and influence the commercial and athletic potential of her progeny. Causes for the decline in fertility include decreased oocyte and embryo quality, anatomical defects and endometrial degeneration. In addition, evidence exists that as the age of a dam increases, her foals will be at increased risk of morbidity and mortality during the neonatal period. Health issues can have lasting and deleterious effects on surviving foals, including decreased sale value and reduced athletic performance. The purpose of this... Read More
22
Novel equine conceptus?endometrial interactions on Day 16 of pregnancy based on RNA sequencing.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
May 5, 2015
doi: 10.1071/RD14489
Klein C.Maintenance of pregnancy is dependent on the exchange of signals between the conceptus and the endometrium. The objective of this study was to use next-generation sequencing to determine transcriptome blueprints of the conceptus and endometrium 16 days after ovulation in the horse. There were 7760 and 10 182 genes expressed in the conceptus and endometrium, respectively, of which 7029 were present in both. Genes related to developmental processes were enriched among conceptus-specific transcripts, whereas many endometrium-specific genes had known roles in cell communication, cell adhesion and ... Read More
20
Is the zona pellucida an efficient barrier to viral infection?
Reproduction, fertility, and development
December 17, 2009
Volume 22, Issue 1 21-31 doi: 10.1071/RD09230
Van Soom A, Wrathall AE, Herrler A, Nauwynck HJ.Although the transfer of embryos is much less likely to result in disease transmission than the transport of live animals, the sanitary risks associated with embryo transfer continue to be the subject of both scientific investigations and adaptations of national and international legislation. Therefore, the implications are important for veterinary practitioners and livestock breeders. In vivo-derived and in vitro-produced embryos are widely used in cattle and embryos from other species, such as sheep, goats, pigs and horses, are also currently being transferred in fairly significant numbers. ... Read More
18
Proteome of equine oviducal fluid: effects of ovulation and pregnancy.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
April 28, 2016
Volume 29, Issue 6 1085-1095 doi: 10.1071/RD15481
Smits K, Nelis H, Van Steendam K, Govaere J, Roels K, Ververs C, Leemans B, Wydooghe E, Deforce D, Van Soom A.The equine oviduct plays a pivotal role in providing the optimal microenvironment for early embryonic development, but little is known about the protein composition of the oviducal fluid in the horse. The aim of the present study was to provide a large-scale identification of proteins in equine oviducal fluid and to determine the effects of ovulation and pregnancy. Four days after ovulation, the oviducts ipsilateral and contralateral to the ovulation side were collected from five pregnant and five non-pregnant mares. Identification and relative quantification of proteins in the oviducal fluid ... Read More
18
Phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B (PI3K/AKT) and Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription (JAK/STAT) follicular signalling is conserved in the mare ovary.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
September 26, 2017
Volume 30, Issue 4 624-633 doi: 10.1071/RD17024
Hall SE, Upton RMO, McLaughlin EA, Sutherland JM.The mare ovary is unique in its anatomical structure; however, the signalling pathways responsible for physiological processes, such as follicular activation, remain uncharacterised. This provided us with the impetus to explore whether signalling molecules from important folliculogenesis pathways, phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B (PI3K/AKT) and Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription (JAK/STAT), are conserved in the mare ovary. Messenger RNA expression of six genes important in follicle development was measured using quantitative polymerase chain reaction and pr... Read More
17
Assisted reproduction techniques in the horse.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
December 19, 2012
Volume 25, Issue 1 80-93 doi: 10.1071/RD12263
Hinrichs K.This paper reviews current equine assisted reproduction techniques. Embryo transfer is the most common equine ART, but is still limited by the inability to superovulate mares effectively. Immature oocytes may be recovered by transvaginal ultrasound-guided aspiration of immature follicles, or from ovaries postmortem, and can be effectively matured in vitro. Notably, the in vivo-matured oocyte may be easily recovered from the stimulated preovulatory follicle. Standard IVF is still not repeatable in the horse; however, embryos and foals can be produced by surgical transfer of mature oocytes to th... Read More
17
Maternal age and in vitro culture affect mitochondrial number and function in equine oocytes and embryos.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
April 17, 2015
Volume 27, Issue 6 957-968 doi: 10.1071/RD14450
Hendriks WK, Colleoni S, Galli C, Paris DB, Colenbrander B, Roelen BA, Stout TA.Advanced maternal age and in vitro embryo production (IVP) predispose to pregnancy loss in horses. We investigated whether mare age and IVP were associated with alterations in mitochondrial (mt) DNA copy number or function that could compromise oocyte and embryo development. Effects of mare age (<12 vs ≥12 years) on mtDNA copy number, ATP content and expression of genes involved in mitochondrial replication (mitochondrial transcription factor (TFAM), mtDNA polymerase γ subunit B (mtPOLB) and mitochondrial single-stranded DNA-binding protein (SSB)), energy production (ATP synthase-couplin... Read More
16
A unique method to produce transgenic embryos in ovine, porcine, feline, bovine and equine species.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
October 10, 2008
Volume 20, Issue 7 741-749 doi: 10.1071/rd07172
Pereyra-Bonnet F, Fernández-Martín R, Olivera R, Jarazo J, Vichera G, Gibbons A, Salamone D.Transgenesis is an essential tool in many biotechnological applications. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)-mediated gene transfer is a powerful technique to obtain transgenic pups; however, most domestic animal embryos do not develop properly after ICSI. An additional step in the protocol, namely assistance by haploid chemical activation, permits the use of ICSI-mediated gene transfer to generate transgenic preimplantation embryos in a wide range of domestic species, including ovine, porcine, feline, equine and bovine. In the present study, spermatozoa from five species were coincubated ... Read More
15
Effect of pregnancy on endometrial expression of luteolytic pathway components in the mare.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
April 1, 2014
Volume 27, Issue 5 834-845 doi: 10.1071/RD13381
de Ruijter-Villani M, van Tol HT, Stout TA.Endometrial oxytocin receptors (OXTR) and prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (PTGS2) are central components of the luteolytic pathway in cyclic mares, and their suppression is thought to be critical to luteal maintenance during early pregnancy. We examined the effect of pregnancy on endometrial expression of potential regulators of prostaglandin (PG) F2α secretion in mares. Expression of the nuclear progesterone receptor and oestrogen receptor ERα was high during oestrus, and depressed when progesterone was elevated; the opposite applied to the membrane progesterone receptor. PTGS2 was up... Read More
15
Caspase-3-mediated apoptosis and cell proliferation in the equine endometrium during the oestrous cycle.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
December 14, 2007
Volume 19, Issue 8 925-932 doi: 10.1071/rd06159
Roberto da Costa RP, Serrão PM, Monteiro S, Pessa P, Silva JR, Ferreira-Dias G.Cell proliferation and apoptosis are hormone-dependent physiological processes involved in endometrial growth and regression. The aims of the present study were: (1) to evaluate endometrial cell proliferation using proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) expression; (2) to evaluate the induction of endometrial cell death by the expression of active caspase-3 and the apoptotic phenotype visualised by DNA fragmentation; and (3) to relate these observations to endometrial tissue dynamics in the equine endometrium throughout the oestrous cycle. Endometria were assigned to follicular and luteal p... Read More
15
Cell type-specific endometrial transcriptome changes during initial recognition of pregnancy in the mare.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
September 27, 2018
Volume 31, Issue 3 496-508 doi: 10.1071/RD18144
Scaravaggi I, Borel N, Romer R, Imboden I, Ulbrich SE, Zeng S, Bollwein H, Bauersachs S.Previous endometrial gene expression studies during the time of conceptus migration did not provide final conclusions on the mechanisms of maternal recognition of pregnancy (MRP) in the mare. This called for a cell type-specific endometrial gene expression analysis in response to embryo signals to improve the understanding of gene expression regulation in the context of MRP. Laser capture microdissection was used to collect luminal epithelium (LE), glandular epithelium and stroma from endometrial biopsies from Day 12 of pregnancy and Day 12 of the oestrous cycle. RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) showe... Read More
14
Effects of age and equine follicle-stimulating hormone (eFSH) on collection and viability of equine oocytes assessed by morphology and developmental competency after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI).
Reproduction, fertility, and development
April 23, 2009
Volume 21, Issue 4 615-623 doi: 10.1071/RD08210
Altermatt JL, Suh TK, Stokes JE, Carnevale EM.Young (4 to 9 yr) and old (>or=20 yr) mares were treated with equine follicle-stimulating hormone (eFSH), and oocytes were collected for intracytoplasmic sperm injections (ICSI). Objectives were to compare: (1) number, morphology and developmental potential of oocytes collected from young v. old mares from cycles with or without exogenous eFSH and (2) oocyte morphology parameters with developmental competence. Oocytes were collected from preovulatory follicles 20 to 24 h after administration of recombinant equine LH and imaged before ICSI for morphological measurements. After ICSI, embryo d... Read More
12
Implication of transcriptome profiling of spermatozoa for stallion fertility.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
March 15, 2018
Volume 30, Issue 8 1087-1098 doi: 10.1071/RD17188
Suliman Y, Becker F, Wimmers K.Poor fertility of breeding stallions is a recognised problem in the equine industry. The aim of the present study was to detect molecular pathways using two groups of stallions that differed in pregnancy rates as well as in the proportion of normal and motile spermatozoa. RNA was isolated from spermatozoa of each stallion and microarray data were analysed to obtain a list of genes for which transcript abundance differed between the groups (P ≤0.05, fold change ≥1.2). In all, there were 437 differentially expressed (DE) genes between the two groups (P ≤ 0.05, fold change ≥1.2). Next, th... Read More
12
Effects of aging on gene expression and mitochondrial DNA in the equine oocyte and follicle cells.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
March 20, 2015
Volume 27, Issue 6 925-933 doi: 10.1071/RD14472
Campos-Chillon F, Farmerie TA, Bouma GJ, Clay CM, Carnevale EM.We hypothesised that advanced mare age is associated with follicle and oocyte gene alterations. The aims of the study were to examine quantitative and temporal differences in mRNA for LH receptor (LHR), amphiregulin (AREG) and epiregulin (EREG) in granulosa cells, phosphodiesterase (PDE) 4D in cumulus cells and PDE3A, G-protein-coupled receptor 3 (GPR3), growth differentiation factor 9 (GDF9), bone morphogenetic protein 15 (BMP15) and mitochondrial (mt) DNA in oocytes. Samples were collected from dominant follicles of Young (3-12 years) and Old (≥20 years) mares at 0, 6, 9 and 12h after admi... Read More
12
Steroids in the equine oviduct: synthesis, local concentrations and receptor expression.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
March 10, 2015
doi: 10.1071/RD14483
Nelis H, Vanden Bussche J, Wojciechowicz B, Franczak A, Vanhaecke L, Leemans B, Cornillie P, Peelman L, Van Soom A, Smits K.Steroids play an important role in mammalian reproduction and early pregnancy. Although systemic changes in steroid concentrations have been well documented, it is not clear how these correlate with local steroid concentrations in the genital tract. We hypothesised that, in the horse, the preimplantation embryo may be subjected to high local steroid concentrations for several days. Therefore, we measured progesterone, 17-hydroxyprogesterone, 17?-oestradiol, testosterone and 17?-testosterone concentrations in equine oviductal tissue by ultra-HPLC coupled with tandem mass spectrometry, and proge... Read More
11
Maternal recognition of pregnancy in the horse: a mystery still to be solved.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
December 1, 2011
Volume 23, Issue 8 952-963 doi: 10.1071/RD10294
Klein C, Troedsson MH.Maternal recognition of pregnancy in the horse is the sum of events leading to maintenance of pregnancy; in a narrow sense, maternal recognition of pregnancy refers to the physiological process by which the lifespan of the corpus luteum is prolonged. The horse is one of the few domestic species in which the conceptus-derived pregnancy recognition signal has not been identified. The presence of the conceptus reduces pulsatile prostaglandin F(2α) secretion by the endometrium during early gestation in the mare, partly attributed to the reduced expression of cyclooxygenase-2. Cyclooxygenase-2 has... Read More
11
Effect of cytokines and ovarian steroids on equine endometrial function: an in vitro study.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
October 19, 2012
Volume 25, Issue 7 985-997 doi: 10.1071/RD12153
Galvão A, Valente L, Skarzynski DJ, Szóstek A, Piotrowska-Tomala K, Rebordão MR, Mateus L, Ferreira-Dias G.Regulation of immune-endocrine interactions in the equine endometrium is not fully understood. The aims of the present study were to: (1) investigate the presence of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF), interferon gamma (IFNG), Fas ligand (FASLG) and their receptors in the mare endometrium throughout the oestrous cycle; and (2) assess endometrial secretory function (prostaglandins), angiogenic activity and cell viability in response to TNF, oestradiol (E2), progesterone (P4) and oxytocin (OXT). Transcription of TNF and FASLG mRNA increased during the early and late luteal phase (LP), whereas IF... Mitochondrial DNA replication is initiated at blastocyst formation in equine embryos.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
November 14, 2018
Volume 31, Issue 3 570-578 doi: 10.1071/RD17387
Hendriks WK, Colleoni S, Galli C, Paris DBBP, Colenbrander B, Stout TAE.Intracytoplasmic sperm injection is the technique of choice for equine IVF and, in a research setting, 18-36% of injected oocytes develop to blastocysts. However, blastocyst development in clinical programs is lower, presumably due to a combination of variable oocyte quality (e.g. from old mares), suboptimal culture conditions and marginal fertility of some stallions. Furthermore, mitochondrial constitution appears to be critical to developmental competence, and both maternal aging and invitro embryo production (IVEP) negatively affect mitochondrial number and function in murine and bovine emb... A journey through horse cloning.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
January 1, 2017
Volume 30, Issue 1 8-17 doi: 10.1071/RD17374
Gambini A, Maserati M.Interest in equine somatic cell nuclear transfer technology has increased significantly since the first equid clones were produced in 2003. This is demonstrated by the multiple commercial equine cloning companies having produced numerous cloned equids to date; worldwide, more than 370 cloned horses have been produced in at least six different countries. Equine cloning can be performed using several different approaches, each with different rates of success. In this review we cover the history and applications of equine cloning and summarise the major scientific advances in the development of t... Mare and stallion effects on blastocyst production in a commercial equine ovum pick-up-intracytoplasmic sperm injection program.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
October 22, 2019
Volume 31, Issue 12 1894-1903 doi: 10.1071/RD19201
Cuervo-Arango J, Claes AN, Stout TAE.This study retrospectively examined the degree to which success within a commercial ovum pick-up (OPU)-intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) program varied between individual mares and stallions. Over 2 years, 552 OPU sessions were performed on 323 privately owned warmblood mares. For mares that yielded at least one blastocyst during the first OPU-ICSI cycle, there was a 77% likelihood of success during subsequent attempts; conversely, when the first cycle yielded no blastocyst, the likelihood of failure (no embryo) in subsequent cycles was 62%. In mares subjected to four or more OPU session... Association of the cysteine-rich secretory protein-3 (CRISP-3) and some of its polymorphisms with the quality of cryopreserved stallion semen.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
September 1, 2017
Volume 30, Issue 3 563-569 doi: 10.1071/RD17044
Usuga A, Rojano BA, Restrepo G.Contribution of seminal plasma proteins to semen freezability has been reported in several species, suggesting these proteins as genetic markers. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between cysteine-rich secretory protein-3 (CRISP-3) and some of its single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with post-thawing semen quality in stallions. DNA was obtained from 100 stallions, regions of interest were amplified by polymerase chain reaction and sequenced. Evaluated SNPs within the equine CRISP-3 gene were CRISP3c.+199A>G (SNP1), CRISP3c.+566C>A (SNP2), CRISP3c.+622G>A (SNP3)... In vitro maturation affects chromosome segregation, spindle morphology and acetylation of lysine 16 on histone H4 in horse oocytes.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
December 15, 2015
Volume 29, Issue 4 721-730 doi: 10.1071/RD15350
Franciosi F, Goudet G, Tessaro I, Papillier P, Dalbies-Tran R, Reigner F, Deleuze S, Douet C, Miclea I, Lodde V, Luciano AM.Implantation failure and genetic developmental disabilities in mammals are caused by errors in chromosome segregation originating mainly in the oocyte during meiosis I. Some conditions, like maternal ageing or in vitro maturation (IVM), increase the incidence of oocyte aneuploidy. Here oocytes from adult mares were used to investigate oocyte maturation in a monovulatory species. Experiments were conducted to compare: (1) the incidence of aneuploidy, (2) the morphology of the spindle, (3) the acetylation of lysine 16 on histone H4 (H4K16) and (4) the relative amount of histone acetyltransferase... Vitrifying immature equine oocytes impairs their ability to correctly align the chromosomes on the MII spindle.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
April 11, 2019
Volume 31, Issue 8 1330-1338 doi: 10.1071/RD18276
Ducheyne KD, Rizzo M, Daels PF, Stout TAE, de Ruijter-Villani M.Vitrified-warmed immature equine oocytes are able to complete the first meiotic division, but their subsequent developmental competence is compromised. Therefore, the present study investigated the effects of vitrifying immature horse oocytes on the chromosome and spindle configuration after IVM. Cumulus-oocytes complexes (COCs) were collected and divided into two groups based on mare age (young ≤14 years; old ≥16 years). COCs were then either directly matured invitro or vitrified and warmed before IVM. Spindle morphology and chromosome alignment within MII stage oocytes were assessed usin... Preantral follicle density in ovarian biopsy fragments and effects of mare age.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
April 27, 2017
Volume 29, Issue 5 867-875 doi: 10.1071/RD15402
Alves KA, Alves BG, Gastal GDA, Haag KT, Gastal MO, Figueiredo JR, Gambarini ML, Gastal EL.The aims of the present study were to: (1) evaluate preantral follicle density in ovarian biopsy fragments within and among mares; (2) assess the effects of mare age on the density and quality of preantral follicles; and (3) determine the minimum number of ovarian fragments and histological sections needed to estimate equine follicle density using a mathematical model. The ovarian biopsy pick-up method was used in three groups of mares separated according to age (5-6, 7-10 and 11-16 years). Overall, 336 preantral follicles were recorded with a mean follicle density of 3.7 follicles per cm. Fol... Analysis of the miRNA transcriptome during testicular development and spermatogenesis of the Mongolian horse.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
March 27, 2020
Volume 32, Issue 6 582-593 doi: 10.1071/RD19133
Li B, He X, Zhao Y, Bai D, Li D, Zhou Z, Manglai D.Numerous studies have shown that microRNAs (miRNAs) are essential for testicular development and spermatogenesis. In order to further characterise these physiological processes, three immature and three mature testes of the Mongolian horse were collected and six libraries were established. Using small RNA sequencing technology, 531 mature miRNAs were identified, including 46 novel miRNAs without previously ascribed functions. Among the 531 miRNAs, 421 were expressed in both immature and mature libraries, 65 miRNAs were found solely in immature testis libraries and 45 miRNAs were found solely i... Amino acid transporter expression in the endometrium and conceptus membranes during early equine pregnancy.
Reproduction, fertility, and development
June 16, 2018
Volume 30, Issue 12 1675-1688 doi: 10.1071/RD17352
Gibson C, de Ruijter-Villani M, Rietveld J, Stout TAE.Maternally derived amino acids (AA) are essential for early conceptus development, and specific transporters enhance histotrophic AA content during early ruminant pregnancy. In the present study we investigated AA transporter expression in early equine conceptuses and endometrium, during normal pregnancy and after induction of embryo-uterus asynchrony. 'Normal' conceptuses and endometrium were recovered on Days 7, 14, 21 and 28 after ovulation. To investigate asynchrony, Day 8 embryos were transferred to recipient mares on Day 8 or Day 3, and conceptuses were recovered 6 or 11 days later. Endo...