Background: Imbalanced diet and exogenous gonadotrophins affect uterine function and morphology. In sheep, FSH-induced superovulation alters implantation-related gene expression, influenced by both treatment and diet. In this study, we used deep RNA sequencing (NGS, RNA-Seq) to expand our understanding of these effects on the caruncular endometrium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPoor maternal nutrition during gestation negatively affects offspring growth and metabolism. To evaluate the impact of maternal nutrient restriction and realimentation on metabolism in the fetal liver, skeletal muscle, and circulation, on day 50 of gestation, ewes ( = 48) pregnant with singletons were fed 100% (CON) or 60% (RES) of requirements until day 90 of gestation, when a subset of ewes ( = 7/treatment) were euthanized, and fetal samples were collected. The remaining ewes were maintained on a current diet (CON-CON, = 6; RES-RES, = 7) or switched to an alternative diet (CON-RES, RES-CON; = 7/treatment).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe hypothesized that nutrient restriction from day 50-90 of gestation decreases umbilical blood flow and that umbilical blood flow would recover to control values upon realimentation during late gestation (d 90 to 130) or remain reduced in ewes that continued to be nutrient restricted. On d 50 of gestation, young nulliparous whiteface ewes (6-8 mo; n = 41) carrying singletons were randomly assigned to two dietary treatments: 100% of NRC recommendations (CON) or 60% of CON (RES). On d 90 of gestation, ewes either remained on CON or RES until d 130, or CON ewes were RES from d 90 to 130, or RES ewes were realimented to CON from d 90 to 130.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDisturbances at the conceptus-maternal interface can have detrimental effects on pregnancy outcome. Additionally, changes in body condition and exogenously administered gonadotropins could affect ovarian and uterine function, including cell proliferation and ovulation rates, and alter endometrial receptivity. In ruminants, endometrial caruncles maintain placental function via interaction with fetal chorionic cotyledons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEstradiol-17β (E2) increases kallikrein in rodent and human reproductive tissues. Kallikrein specific activity is increased in the porcine uterus when conceptus E2 is secreted at maternal recognition of pregnancy. When kallikrein acts on kininogen to liberate bradykinin, angiogenic and vasoactive factors are released.
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