Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
December 2024
The porcine and human heart are remarkably similar in cardiac physiology and biochemistry. Translational research involving the porcine biomedical model is becoming increasingly applicable for the study of human cardiac function in health and disease. Presently, few protocols exist for collecting experimentally viable cardiac tissue from large animal models, particularly during neonatal maturation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe hypothesis that developmental estrogenic exposure induces a constellation of male reproductive tract abnormalities is supported by experimental and human evidence. Experimental data also suggest that some induced effects persist in descendants of exposed males. These multi- and transgenerational effects are assumed to result from epigenetic changes to the germline, but few studies have directly analyzed germ cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWidespread use of the endocrine disrupting chemical bisphenol A (BPA) in consumer products has resulted in nearly continuous human exposure. In rodents, low-dose exposures have been reported to adversely affect two distinct stages of oogenesis in the developing ovary: the events of prophase at the onset of meiosis in the fetal ovary and the formation of follicles in the perinatal ovary. Because these effects could influence the reproductive longevity and success of the exposed individual, we conducted studies in the rhesus monkey to determine whether BPA induces similar disturbances in the developing primate ovary.
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